Example sentences of "[noun] [noun sg] [adv] [adv] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | If you live in an area that has a lot of old buildings , the council may run out of grant money very quickly and you will have to wait until next year . |
2 | It had been refitted with a low-watt bulb practically too dim to see by , in order to save electricity . |
3 | The PFA chairman no longer figures in Bassett 's first-team plans and has been available at a bargain £70,000 since the end of last season . |
4 | The worst kind of burn gives painful blisters and general skin damage within about an hour after exposure . |
5 | That 's like a skating rink now then . |
6 | A Thames Valley spokesman said : ‘ It was like a skating rink out there . ’ |
7 | Er as we know round about July August time , the remaining nine P C's will be er turned into civilians wave of a magic wand the biggest problem there is the total loss of our skills base overnight effectively , the second thing is it 'll take a long long time to get them trained particularly in relation to A L O work . |
8 | She could see the motorway flyover up ahead , but would not take that faster route west just yet . |
9 | Bérégovoy had let the budget deficit rise alarmingly rather than raise taxes , which he feared would have cut both demand and the Socialists ' vote . |
10 | but it has shifted the radical photography base quite seriously . |
11 | IMHO he 's really helped make the back division look much better ( by our standards anyway ; - ) ) and him out *could* leave a big hole back there . |
12 | So er that paint did n't cover the skirting board very well . |
13 | Luke strode along beside her , hands pushed easily into the pockets of the leather jacket he was wearing over jeans and a blue knit shirt that made his skin look even more tanned , his hair richly black . |
14 | Off the field Sole also recently switched roles , resigning from his job with an Edinburgh wine merchant to work as a grain buyer for United Distillers . |
15 | Are the sales figures put forward in the case study really as good as implied ? |
16 | But the Crues eased up alarmingly in the second-half to give an out-of-touch Newry side far too much room . |
17 | His conclusion is that English , if constituted according to these principles , is the university study not only best suited to produce the truly democratic individual , but the discipline which is " destined in time to become the educational centre in English speaking democracies " . |
18 | Yeah your local field agent out here would only be |
19 | We plan to install one of the ‘ Amstrad ’ draft printers so as to provide some draft printing capability as soon as possible , and to consider further the possibility of replacing the heavily-used Epson printer next financial year . |
20 | The girl said she still thinks fondly of her time in England — but could not bear to stay at University College any longer . |
21 | We can sort the money side out later , but I do n't want you to worry about that either . |
22 | When is a ghost movie not really a ghost move ? |
23 | But after we 'd pulled over and Jeffrey Bernard had been unwell on the pavement , after the police car had been persuaded to leave us alone , and after we 'd finally got that hefty brute of a Bill Ellis Trophy fully upright again — in its carrying case and everything — I was at least able to start thinking partially straight again . |
24 | WITH the printing industry no longer a political hot-bed , Bob Gavron , chairman of St Ives , is sanguine about the prospect of a Labour government . |
25 | We have restored the hospital building programme so savagely cut by Labour at the end of their last term of office . |
26 | Loo Rock no longer stands alone ; it is now incorporated in the harbour mole , and a road tunnel passes through it . |
27 | 1 ) The continued growth of the company through the 1970 's had stretched the clerical resources within the Personnel Department too far . |
28 | And then erm they 'll have a couple of hours or an hour break there probably and then erm |
29 | For historic reasons the infant baptism figure most accurately represents the ‘ external constituency ’ of the Church of England , that is , those who are favourably disposed , but most of whom do not bother to attend . |
30 | If you wish to recreate the geyser effect so spectacularly displayed in Geneva , but of course on a much smaller scale , then you can buy special foaming geyser jets . |