Example sentences of "[conj] [prep] [pers pn] [det] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | For example I shall later consider Bultmann , who has no classical two-nature Christology , but who says of Jesus , as of no other , that this was the man whom God raised from the dead ; so that for him this man 's resurrection becomes the pivot of history . |
2 | ‘ But I would say that underneath it all Diana is a survivor and she will do anything to survive . |
3 | ‘ We did n't overdo or over emphasize Ken 's neuterism because we had him make love or going after it , but we knew that underneath it all was another character . ’ |
4 | Confirm then I resolve , Adam shall share with me in bliss or woe , so dear I love him that with him all deaths I could endure without him live no life . ’ |
5 | Whether she is consciously twisting logic , or just , poor girl , confused , I 'm not sure , but at the end it 's quite clear ‘ So dear I love them that with him all deaths I could endure , without him live no life ’ , that she 's got into a world of fantasy because the one thing that is of course not in question is that Adam should die and that she should live on , which appears to be what she 's referring to here . |
6 | She started to say that to her this sounded more like Khrushchev , and she stopped herself again ; the line was so clearly a proffering of comfort . |
7 | We can , however , have a reasonable faith that there is , based on the realization that without it all moral thought is a complete illusion . |
8 | And between them both , you can , you could I mean you take a ten thousand pound out with a mortgage , mortgage , and you could end up paying what , twenty thousand , twenty four thousand back . |
9 | A recent visit to the Festival of Photoreportage was the first time that Tony had met other members of the group , ‘ Some of them I did n't know and for me that was the wondrous part of being at Perpignan . ’ |
10 | He did not turn up to the funeral when his friend died , and for me this was sadder than the loss of the vicar who had found peace and hope before he died . |
11 | He 's always been surrounded by people who think everything else he does is marvellous , but one of the points of our relationship has been that I 've always criticised his work , and for me those double portraits of the Seventies came perilously close to Photo-Realism . ’ |
12 | And certainly if you look at the case for very many women not in the job tops we 're talking about low paid work erm low rates of unionisation , very , very low rates of day care erm it 's those sorts of things that I 'm talking about , and for me those are very , very much more important than the fact that we 've only got one woman Chief Officer at the top in the County Council . |
13 | We all limp , more or less , was the antihero 's way of putting it , and for him all consciousness was a disease . |
14 | However , an equal number of players are working in situations were an ability to adapt to different musical landscapes enhances their earning power considerably , and for them this type of rig is a Godsend . |
15 | AI workers are , by and large , naive materialists and mechanists , and for them those are not positions to be justified , but simply assumptions that allow them to get on with the job of constructing mechanical analogues or simulations of ourselves , who are , in Minsky 's memorable phrase , ‘ meat machines ’ . |
16 | Fr. indicates that for St Paul and for us this poses three questions : ( 1 ) Who is Jesus ? ( 2 ) Who is Jesus for me ? ( 3 ) Who am I ? |
17 | ADF means automatic direction finding , and for us this means the radio compass . |
18 | On the whole , the new families seem to be quite affectionate units and through them some elements of the moral tradition are being handed on . |
19 | On the other side of the argument it is inconceivable that the ancestor of the people of God , and through him that nation itself , should receive their name from a local demon of an insignificant wadi . |
20 | And through it all he stayed . |
21 | And through it all there are constant thoughts of death : |
22 | And through it all were shafts of golden splendour , shooting down from above to burnish the leaves with brilliance . |
23 | And through it all the cats multiplied fatly — |
24 | And through it all man 's ( and woman 's ) search for a truly great beer went on . |
25 | They slowed it to a steady well , but it would n't stop , and through it all there was the awful screaming . |
26 | In any event , unlike the autumn of 1557 , the time was now certainly ripe for the peculiar inspiration of John Knox , the man who , in the words of the English diplomat Randolph , ‘ is able in one hour to put more life into us than five hundred trumpets continually blustering in our ears ’ , and who would later be described by the same diplomat in 1561 , a week after Mary 's return to Scotland , as the preacher who ‘ thundereth out of the pulpit … he ruleth the roast , and of him all men stand in fear ’ . |
27 | My thoughts , back here in the familiarity of Woolley Hall are all happy ones of Basil and of you both here . |
28 | I 'm only just getting the bad taste out of my mouth — I was ashamed of myself , and of us all . ’ |
29 | And throughout it all the music , first heard as an eerie sketch inside the hero 's head , skeletally indistinct and bone china fragile . |
30 | Ambiguities of this kind constantly disturb our attempts to describe the social organization of Europe at this time ; and behind them all lies a more fundamental uncertainty . |