Example sentences of "if [pers pn] [verb] [prep] [art] [det] " in BNC.

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1 Well if I left at the same time as you he mi he might feel obliged to offer me a lift but if he did
2 If I stay in the same place for too long I get stale . ’
3 If she walks within a few hundred yards of this building , she will see young people , whom the Government have deprived of benefit , sleeping rough and begging on the streets because of the total indifference of people such as the hon. Lady and Conservative Members .
4 If you eat more on some days and less on others , you will shed weight just as successfully as if you stuck to the same number of calories each day .
5 Bring towels and spare clothes , if you intend to the same as last year !
6 And even if you remain in the same location , you could still feel unsettled .
7 If you stay on the same mark or higher it 's good .
8 If you stay in the same place then the whole process of sexual reproduction means that indeed there are uniform populations which are hybridizing with one another and then barriers to other hybridizing population , but not if you move about .
9 Oh yeah yeah I would imagine so but I w er maybe it 's maybe you become a member if you go to a few of their and they get to know your faces or something and then you apply but I do n't really know .
10 On the criteria we 've been talking about today , so find yourself a partner that you have n't worked with today somebody erm if you go in the same group that Kathy 's in because then if it comes up to four o'clock Kathy wants to go then you can be the other partner you 've got half an hour to put on one sheet of paper clearly and concisely what we 've done on communications .
11 It 's best if you keep to the same time each week for regular activities , though be prepared to be flexible about it .
12 If you come across the same situation the newly created Frog Mortality Unit at the Institute of Zoology wants to know .
13 If you wait for a few minutes , and it really can be that long , you might be surprised to discover that Windows un-freezes of its own accord .
14 Her opening words , which echo a pair of lines in Chaucer 's first fabliau in the sequence of the Canterbury Tales , the Miller 's Tale ( I : 3768 – 9 ) , invite a dialogue charged with sexual connotations , not only in the obvious case of " " ryse " " , but also in the detectable reference to a conventional love-sickness : The monk 's answer immediately confirms the sexual topic of the dialogue , and dispenses with any euphemistic disguises : This rapid movement to a contextually surprising level of familiarity on the topic of sexual intimacy is paralleled in the French fabliau Auburee , where the old bawd , Auburee , in procuring a young wife for a besotted admirer , visits the wife and moves smartly into the bedroom , declaring : ( " I should certainly like to see your bed : then I should know for certain if you lie in the same splendour as the first wife did . " )
15 See some different characteristics and a supersonic and so that then , so the elevator and control services because at supersonic speeds , if you moved at the same distance , at six hundred mile an hour the elevator went like that , so that sort of
16 If you skate with the same passion as you preach I dare say you will have the whole parish at your feet . ’
17 The distance you want is the perpendicular distance to the line , not the distance you would travel to the line if you stayed on the same heading .
18 If you live in the same house as your landlord and your share living accommodation , ( e.g. kitchen or bathroom ) then once a Notice to Quit has been served upon you and has expired your landlord has the legal right to order you to leave your accommodation .
19 If we go round the same group and ask them how much management training they 've had , we 'd be lucky if we could dredge up fifty weeks .
20 if we follow on the same way
21 So if we get to the all play and we win the all play we 've won .
22 If we work through the former alone the range of choice or the breadth of the spectrum will vary from area to area .
23 An example of this is the trigram model used in the TANGORA speech recogniser ( Jelinek , 1986 ) which assumed that histories are equivalent if they end in the same two words .
24 Denis wondered sometimes if they came from the same father and mother .
25 If they sit at the same or adjacent desks they have a spatial bond .
26 If they sit at the same or adjacent desks they have a spatial bond .
27 Indeed , one scientist has been so misled by this grammatical similarity as to say that , given appropriate nerve graftings , two people could feel the same pain just as , if they looked in the same direction , they could see the same table .
28 This enforced poverty made them easier targets for propaganda : if they left with no more than their allowance , they could be portrayed as shabby Untermenschen scuttling away like rats ; if they managed to outwit the system , then they were economic criminals fleeing with stolen goods .
29 If they decide on the former , then they may deny differences between themselves and their child but they must , in the interests of the child , differentiate the child and his or her natural parents from themselves in terms of race , colour and sometimes culture .
30 ‘ But if they play with the same commitment and determination , against Villa at Highbury , I 'll be satisfied . ’
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