Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] [vb -s] [pers pn] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 peas about , yeah but he does n't , he does n't eat them much does he ?
2 I only 'opes he 's as good as he seems , ’ he commented .
3 I just thinks it 's human nature .
4 So I I just thinks it 's a , it 's a feature of the rapid development of the environmental sector , that , for , as I say , for quite understandable reasons , some of those links , and networks , have n't been fully established , and our project which we see as a , as a short term one , essentially a three year bit of work , is going to address that , and it 's been widely supported by er , a number of environmental groups .
5 I just worries me that these caring people are the same people that support the Tory policies that oppressed
6 You just , I just leaves it on the side .
7 The data comes in almost without intervention , fills in the pages , and someone just checks it to make sure it fits and erm that 's a great system .
8 I always says it .
9 I always says it to her face
10 I always gives her like six cos I thinks well , you know she comes , yeah .
11 But I still thinks it 's just best to leave that on there .
12 Someone close brings you great pleasure and joy now .
13 Someone still loves you ! ’
14 I nearly knows it . ’
15 Goffman ( 1981 : 150 ) cites one type of example : if someone repeatedly tells us to shut the window , we can finally respond by repeating his words in a strident pitch , enacting a satirical version of his utterance ( " say-foring " ) .
16 And knowing someone automatically makes you feel close to him .
17 I learned that using someone sexually leaves you feeling oddly empty and bad about yourself .
18 The censor at the moment happens to be the Medical Officer attached to Brigade H.Q How can one possibly write a love letter to someone when someone else reads it first , and draws at random a blue pencil through your choicest lines ?
19 The chief mark of that period was a new confidence in the power of reason , as opposed to acceptance of authority , to discover truth : we find things out , not simply by believing what someone else tells us , but by considering the evidence , reflecting upon it , and accepting what can ‘ prove itself at the bar of reason ’ .
20 I 'll eat anything provided someone else gets it ready .
21 Before someone else gets it .
22 In other words , having a space open to all , where you 're a bit of a showman and hope someone else likes it as much as you do .
23 Someone else calls him a ‘ big softy ’ .
24 You ca n't always wait until someone else tries it .
25 We all know intuitively that if someone firmly believes they are inadequate and worthless , that the world is a rotten place and that life is full of suffering , then they will not have a joyous , exuberant and loving life .
26 I 've had them stretched once , I wants them stretched again cos I 've got a beautiful ring up there and I never puts them on .
27 It does n't detract from them anyway does it ?
28 This information is all the more important because of the official nature of coins , which thereby gives them an advantage over other more private inscriptions .
29 The mystery therefore , remains , but it is not the only mystery attached to the Charfield disaster , indeed the one which most concerns us in the context of the strange and uncanny is the riddle of the unclaimed bodies .
30 The story which most reminds me of animism ( if anything does ) is that of the angel who stirred up the pool of Bethesda ( John 5:1–15 ) .
  Next page