Example sentences of "they [verb] [verb] [art] great [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I have come to appreciate over the years , however , that the extra material they provide makes a great safety net .
2 They got a nasty shock : real bush pilots had been attracted to the UK from the four corners of the earth to get these well-maintained examples , and the high prices they fetched reflected the great demand that still exists for these superb workhorses .
3 In fact I 've known people to go right in , so it , it , it 's not a simple job , you know , and they do take a great deal of risk with this , and I do , I mean it 's much more serious than I think than the government find , it should really work hard to try , to try to find something else .
4 They 've made a great start , but five shots after one round is nothing in this tournament . ’
5 Both Mike and Brian say they 've gained a great deal
6 Mike Evans , Managing Director of Pacplas , summed up the judges ' view : ‘ First , they 've achieved a great deal and the spirit of the team means they 'll get better and better .
7 ‘ But they 've done a great job .
8 Tower Hamlets found that they could not decentralize Social Services , for example , because of the statutory requirement to have a Social Services Committee , but everything else they 've erm within the overall Council policy , which is decided by all the Councillors , they 've decentralized a great deal of the powers down to these local groups of Councillors , and where the Labour control the areas they control these local Councils , and where the Liberal Democrats control them they control them , and I think it 's working very well .
9 Well I mean I ca n't say enough for the people in the Aberdeen Royal Infirmary , I mean they 've got a great burns unit there and I mean er er I think the plastic surgeons and what knot are about they must be some of the best in the world .
10 And they had suffered a great loss when John Crabb , their notable leader , had been captured by the English on his return from his ill-fated venture to the Tay and Perth in support of Mar .
11 It grieved me to see how they had stripped the great Rhododendron and the lesser Kalmias . ’
12 They had drunk a great deal and the night was warm , but on a sudden they were both stone-cold sober .
13 … it was very odd that they got the money in the first place … however they had thought a great deal and had a viable project … and may be a certain amount of guilt .
14 During the ride to Pesth they had talked a great deal .
15 According to him they had brought a great deal of food with them and despite the loss of Crane 's saddlebags and wallet there seemed to be no shortage of provisions .
16 As early as 1707 Hugh , first Earl of Cholmondeley [ q.v. ] , was advised by a surveyor in London that the Smiths did a ‘ great deal of busness in the Contry and they have done a great deal of work thearabout & in Warwick you may easy hear of them ’ ; and when in the 1730s Sarah , Duchess of Marlborough [ q.v. ] , was building a house as far away as Wimbledon , Surrey , she stipulated that ‘ Mr. Smith of Warwickshire the Builder may be employed to make Contracts and to Measure the Work and to doe every thing in his Way that is necessary to Compleat the Work as far as the Distance he is at will give him leave to do . ’
17 When anyone suggests , as people will , that they have done a great thing for Anna , Tony and Christine are quick to reply that it has been a great thing , also , for them .
18 Adventurers who have got this far deserve some hefty magical rewards for their efforts , especially if they have overcome the Great Enchanter himself .
19 Disabled people find that they have to put a great deal of effort into making various authorities meet their ordinary everyday needs .
20 But some in-laws do manage to get along remarkably well together , even when they have to spend a great deal of time in each other 's company .
21 Since they moved to Orkney in 1984 , they have invested a great deal in the farm , and work very hard at all hours .
22 From the Latin limbus ( the edge ) , it is the name given to the region inhabited by those spirits who can go neither to Heaven because they are not baptised , nor to Hell because they have committed no great sin .
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