Example sentences of "they [verb] [verb] [adv] [adv] [conj] " in BNC.
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1 | She waited on the landing a long time , hating the awful quietness and longing for them to start shouting again so that she would know everything was all right . |
2 | The Massachusetts Institute of Technology 's Salon School of Management , the Open Software Foundation , Bull Worldwide Information Systems and the European Community are pooling resources to co-host Enterprise ‘ 93 June 16 to 18 at the World Trade Center in Boston : the programme , aimed at top executives , aims to help them manage computing more profitably and effectively . |
3 | They failed to recognise once again that the subjects of the discussion are in no way ‘ ordinary people ’ , either by their own or our admittance . |
4 | They tend to subside as quickly as they arise . |
5 | They also saw it as an opportunity to get the packages of care that they sought implemented as early as possible . |
6 | Friendship is more important than mountaineering , and so for their sakes I told them they 'd done very well and we turned back to the prospect of a more leisurely Sunday afternoon , with colour supplements , cats , coffee and carpets to lie on . |
7 | They seem to run more smoothly and quickly together when reading in comparison to the heaviness of the first part . |
8 | The Trade Winds blew deficits and the workers got so bored striking at every available Sunny Day that they began working really really and blew the gaskets of many a Director 's heart . |
9 | They continue to fall away alarmingly when it comes to formal examinations and so decrease their own chances of gaining stimulating and challenging employment . |
10 | And sometimes they decide to do so just because the alternatives seem so appalling . |
11 | In addition the costs and benefits of new procedures change over time as they become diffused more widely and in comparison to available alternatives . |
12 | This means that Snotlings can be very frustrating to fight , because no matter how many are slain they keep fighting so long as their neighbours hold steady . |
13 | " He summoned a meeting , where a simple plan was very simply found : since they had nothing left but their lives and their bodies , they chose to die nobly rather than to betray and abandon their king " . |
14 | However , they do grow quite quickly and one day you 'll only have one Trigger left , as the most dominant one will assert its authority . |
15 | Glass and enamel tesserae , for , are uncommon in Britain — although they do occur more frequently than is sometimes suggested ( Boon 1974 , 345 ; Neal 1976 , 243 ) . |
16 | And they 've given far more than but you or I will ever contemplate doing for God ! |
17 | Yes so lots of games for United to play at the moment with the postponements , a lot of mid-week games , a lot of games up here at the Manor , but erm as so often happens with United , after a good performance or a little a good run , they never quite do it at home do they , they never quite kill sides off and they draw in games that they 've played very well as they have done today . |
18 | they 've lost as far as money 's concerned . |
19 | but , er , I do n't think they 've got as far as yours have |
20 | They 've had far more than what we 've ever had |
21 | By the time he got to his cab , they had gone as far as Holborn Circus . |
22 | Passing lamp-lit windows through which they could see sleeping Japanese soldiers and men talking in small groups , they had gone as far as a machine-gun post among the buildings — probably part of the anti-aircraft defences-when a Japanese soldier came up . |
23 | Duncan looked at Myeloski ; they had gone as far as they could with the air-traffic controller . |
24 | Indeed they had gone so far as to bring one Nicoleyva , from the Soviet Union to plead with British men and women to do just this , and open a second front in Europe . |
25 | The independent ethic they had courted so successfully since their conception was beginning to fall hopelessly apart . |
26 | They had done so well that the convent put photographs of the two girls in the local paper . |
27 | They had moved there soon after Sir Charles had begun to live in Baskerville Hall . |
28 | They had worked so hard as children in the fields that each field and tree had become a dear presence , especially the hedges . |
29 | They had worked together often and got on well . |
30 | A good deal of credulity and nonsense was indulged in the name of psychology but there was no nonsense about the concept of ‘ psychological obsolescence ’ , the new technique for making people dissatisfied with what they had bought more quickly than ever before . |