Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] [adv] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | We could bring them right well the two that are down there could come |
2 | It throws a much colder light on those satisfaction ratings if , unlike in their relationships with their accountants , clients are basing them on just the service delivered during a one-off transaction . |
3 | I certainly advise you to keep asking questions throughout because as I say although they 're speaking in a very very general way the often slip up and give you a particular that you can take advantage and if you lead them on then the more information is available to you . |
4 | I always try to read the question calmly at first , because I hope that if I read them slowly enough the words will , in some miraculous way , make sense to me . |
5 | Bush justified the move on the grounds that the legislation was " unacceptable to me on almost every ground : ethical , fiscal , administrative , philosophical and legal " . |
6 | So we got everyone together here the bank manager , was Mr then , Barclays Bank we got two or three of the industrialists all of the members that were prepared to help and we started from there . |
7 | Time does n't worry them in nearly the same way . |
8 | Sometimes he does , just before he goes to bed but you have to put them in just the right place . |
9 | But using them in exactly the way suggested will increase your skills . |
10 | Kirov crouched at his side , removing a couple of pins and replacing them in exactly the same position . |
11 | When you have finished with the works clean them in exactly the same way . |
12 | The next step up is the hundreds , and you use them in exactly the same way , one twice a week . |
13 | When Mr. Millan was Secretary of State for Scotland he administered them in exactly the same way as that for which he criticises us . |
14 | Unfortunately it would appear , or perhaps fortunately , depending on , on one 's views , erm , the policy has always been quite clear , that we should treat them in exactly the same way as we treat the independent sector , and that there would be an arm 's length independent inspection , that has now been made explicitly clear that that is the requirement , and therefore you would have to withdraw that and say that if there is a requirement to find a further two hundred and fifty thousand pounds ' worth of savings , we will have to go and identify another area rather than that . |
15 | We do n't yet know what these are , but for reasons which it would n't be proper for me to go into we believe that we may know more about them in about a week . |
16 | We just do n't seem to be able to track them down or attract them in quite the same way , so there is a massive practical problem if you want them to have a voice in how things are done , there 's no doubt about that . |
17 | To gain information from sites and finds , they have to be treated as evidence , and information has to be deduced from them in much the same way as a detective uses forensic evidence . |
18 | It takes four pictures within five seconds and transmits them in under a minute ; it incorporates infra-red strobes , making it effective without light . |
19 | Two acting notes for Frank : Less is more — do not shift your eyes at the audience so much , stare them down once every scene ; when in doubt about what to say next do not keep ad-libbing about Harry . |
20 | I went to his dressing room and slammed the door behind me so hard the mirror broke . |
21 | I would remember , against my will , the fragrance of coffee and hot bread , the energy that had possessed me so short a time ago , when I had felt supple as an eel , as powerful as a salmon , as sure and quiet and graceful as an owl . |
22 | They had stood talking for quite some time , each of them perhaps slightly the worse for wear , and then she had invited him up to her North Oxford home for a night-cap . |
23 | But because he read them so often the Bookman had a little problem . |
24 | This obsession — and one can , I think , rightly call it that — involved me in probably the most embarrassing event of my professional life . |
25 | He feared me in both a familiar and unfamiliar way . |
26 | Perhaps you can see that this must mean that interchanging the two particles must leave me in exactly the same physical state . |
27 | So I was close by and so they sent me in so the way I , I got dressed up in the minister 's cassock , and I got in revised the books of Genesis , like through and I get genned up to be a minister and I took in a bible and er well anyway I killed five men and they got out alive . |
28 | My senses returned to me in perhaps an hour , when I beheld the roof burning . |
29 | Moreover , the event seemed to me much more a paean to the Pahlavi family than to Iran . |
30 | You 'll open those jaws of yours so wide the hinges will snap at the corners . ’ |