Example sentences of "as [pron] [verb] [pers pn] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Erm I was rather interested by the comparisons which you explained a little earlier in the evidence erm if you 've got an aircraft which is er going to replace , as I understand it the Jaguar and the Phantom which has already been retired , er against which you 've been comparing the F three er and the G R four of the tornados and the harriers , then er that gives rise in my mind to the possibility that this is an aircraft which might replace all of these , in which case will that have consequences for the still er publicly declared intention to order two hundred and fifty , might we order more for example ?
2 Now as I understand it the minister 's position is that he be bound to refer that matter to the partner responsible for audit and that partner er would then be put on notice that er he ought to report it to the relevant authority .
3 As I understand it the structure plan is based on an average density employment density of forty three .
4 er As I understand it the cost will be offset by the National Asthma Campaign .
5 As I understand it the Cleveland structure plan proposes the same number of dwellings for erm its next period which happens to be fourteen years , as it did for the last fourteen of the of the previous structure plan , fifteen thousand seven hundred .
6 As I handed them the keys to their new home it was like unlocking the door to their future happiness . ’
7 But as I handed him the money the room grew quiet again .
8 Er but that 's er as I see it the role of the local plan in relation to policy such as E two .
9 Although as I see it the facts do not fit easily into the existing category of duress or of claims colore officii , they shade into them .
10 I dream of Strathspeld , and the long summers of my childhood passed in a trance of lazy pleasure , ending with that day , running through the woods ( but I turn away from that memory , the way I 've learned to over the years ) ; I wander again through the woods and the small , hidden glens , along the shores of the ornamental lochan and the river and its loch and I 'm standing near the old boathouse in that defeatingly bright sunlight , light dancing on water , and I see two figures , naked and thin and white in the grass beyond the reed beds , and as I watch them the light turns from gold to silver and then to white , and the trees seem to shrink in on themselves , leaves disappearing in the chill coruscations of that enveloping white blaze while the view all around me becomes brighter and darker at once and all is reduced to black and white ; trees are bare and black , the ground smother-smoothed in white and the two young figures are gone , while one even smaller one — booted , gloved , coat-tails flying behind — runs laughing across the white level of the frozen loch .
11 As long as you teach them the basics , they should be all right .
12 So just think of resistance as sort of something that stops the current , and as you increase it the current gets less .
13 ‘ There , Mr Cottle , ’ Mary Ann was saying to the traveller in jelly , as she passed him the bread and butter , ‘ this 'll put roses in your cheeks . ’
14 Their hands touched as she passed him the bottle .
15 But as she reached him the vision shimmered and disappeared and she was alone , stumbling as she tried to find her way through the shadows of a forest , mist cloaking the branches of the trees .
16 Although even as she said it the thought rushed through her mind that that was exactly what she was doing now .
17 As she showed him the barn , they began to talk of the forest .
18 In what seems a somewhat specious argument , she urges Leo to bathe with her in the fire so that their mortal sins may be purged : but although the fire at first seems to do her no harm as she shows him the way into it , the self-seeking nature of her love becomes evident as her ageless beauty is destroyed :
19 Glendambo is the last petrol station for 200 kilometres , " warned the Budget car-hire girl , as she handed me the keys to a six-cylinder Holden Commodore .
20 As she handed him the cup of tea her tone changed : ‘ Not that I 'm against joking , but everything in its place ; when I 'm here with Aunt Lizzie , we chaff each other , but … but not all the time . ’
21 ‘ I know what you mean , ’ she murmured , willing her hands to remain steady as she handed him the cup .
22 Merrill protested as she handed him the file .
23 ‘ Everything 's fine , my darling , ’ she whispered , giving Constance a little pat as she handed her the telephone .
24 Richard hugged her as she gave him the keys .
25 In West Yorkshire to the South we have similar problems of inner city decline and there as we understand it the authorities wish to cater for their housing needs .
26 As we examined it the man from behind the desk appeared soundlessly at our side .
27 May they remind us of birthdays and other gift-days as they teach us the secret that all life is meant for celebration and contemplation .
28 All the girls helped her to get the fire going , spread the tablecloth , put out the cups and plates , laughing and whispering and bustling about as they showed her the places and secrets of the kitchen , the room that was now her room .
29 As they showed her the house , Rose seemed to enter completely into the terrible awareness of Moran now sitting in the car chair meditatively rotating his thumbs about one another .
30 On the lower rung of legal self-determination the grant of customary franchises might be in a lord 's interests , for it could secure his revenues in perpetuity , even as it barred him the chance of arbitrary exaction ; besides , an early concession might prevent more explosive demands later .
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