Example sentences of "they [vb base] [adv] [verb] [conj] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 They are registered with the English Golf Union and play regular fixtures at Mill Hill and Highgate in addition to Henley where they feel particularly welcomed and privileged by being permitted to play on a Sunday .
2 They go on to say that large firms ‘ are constrained in some way [ in making these decisions ] by the requirement to make profits and serve consumers ’ , but it is nevertheless appropriate to stress that companies will usually have options about how to manage the impact of changed market conditions or technology : the company is not merely a passive instrument of the market .
3 They recognise that the development of both state intervention and a corporatist system of interest representation go together , but they go on to suggest that this is tied into a particular period of capitalist development .
4 It 's all anonymous , you 're not e e e nobody know who it is , it 's for it 's for a dictionary and they want new words that are commonly used and they do n't want and all old words that never get used it 'll be dropped in the next edition of the dictionary .
5 At the moment they do n't know whether this was an accident , a murder or a suicide pact .
6 Because it keeps happening , boys and girls in their summer holiday keep get getting taken away by people they do n't know and nasty things done to them .
7 Finally , Schrager and Short focus on ‘ illegal ’ acts , but they do not stress that this refers to acts punishable by the state regardless of whether they are subsumed under civil , administrative , or criminal law .
8 It is a threat because the Government have sat back willingly and said that they do not care if another 30 million tonnes of coal is taken out of the take and if there are to be gas-fired power stations .
9 So they do not know that white Rhodesians behaved in a relatively civilised manner compared , say , with the French in Algeria or the Portuguese in Mozambique .
10 They do not deny that Social Democrats helped to implant worker-consciousness of such international emblems of solidarity as May Day and assisted in the development of working-class organizations .
11 They do not question whether this concept of relational potential itself may be generated , as Adams ( 1983 ) suggests , within specific discourses of the subject .
12 And they 've also agreed that any alteration of the plan will be referred back to this Council for their consideration .
13 is , is , in London and we deal with the British Section which is are the particular bits , but the prisoners have to be vatted and looked at and found by the International Secretaires , then they 're passed on to British Section who pass them on to us and a great deal of research goes into making sure that they really are truly prisoners of conscience , that they 've been in prison for some er possibly because of their belief or religion or their race erm and they 've not taken or advocated violence not taken part in or advocated violence and then , then they are full prisoners of conscience erm we maybe allocated them .
14 Well they 've they 've obviously varied and most of them are economic based .
15 about how many copies where they 've actually gone that that is some that is sent out to all school 's and quite considerable numbers are sent out .
16 If the parliamentary debates here have aligned Christians against Muslims they have also proved that both sides appreciate the need for change .
17 They have also shown that 60 per cent of the energy released from fossil fuels is wasted .
18 They have repeatedly stated that all prisoners in Tibet are ‘ criminals ’ who have broken the law and the constitution .
19 Difficulties arise when individuals are asked to develop , qualities which they do not possess or which they have previously dismissed as irrelevant or not worth possessing .
20 Harlow should of applied for a designation a long time ago if Harlow had been designated then surrounding councils would have had to live up their responsibilities to provide adequate sites for travellers which they have not done and successive governments have also failed to apply the caravan sites act nineteen sixty eight adequately .
21 If they have since discovered that this contact can be fulfilling and life-enhancing — and this is certainly not always the case — it is because they have benefited from the broader range of experiences which this contact has offered .
22 Unfortunately they went back to their bad old ways during the autumn in the championship , but they have now regained that hungry look which can only spell trouble for their rivals .
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