Example sentences of "[conj] [pers pn] [vb -s] just " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 She will be accompanied on the year-long exercise by colleagues from Bristol University , where she has just completed her final examination for a zoology degree .
2 Is my hon. Friend aware that she has just scored a marvellous bull 's eye ?
3 ‘ But it is possible that she has just decided to leave the area . ’
4 Would Mrs agree that the resources argument that she 's just used is completely fallacious and would she not accept er that it 's better to spend fifty thousand pounds
5 she feels that the whole thing needs rationalizing and that she 's just come , co come to the pi the point where she can rationalize everything for once in her life .
6 She 's not , she 's not well so she 's just come again .
7 In defending this choice of subject matter Le Roy Ladurie has recently protested that it represents just whatever can be most readily understood in quantitative terms .
8 This is not arbitrary — it is designed so that it operates just as well with colour-blind predators as with those that have good colour vision .
9 The ICRF is such a worthy cause and what makes it particularly so is that it uses just 8p out of every £1 for administration , meaning 92p really goes on advancing the research , ’ she said .
10 The company is now in a regulatory climate where no objection would be made to either of its corporate investors , NEC Corp and IBM Corp , each with around 5% , greatly increasing their stakes in the company — to perhaps 25% each — but IBM has no cash to spare even if it wanted to get more involved with a company forever at the mercy of the shifting tides of French policy and NEC Corp , which two or three years ago would have jumped at the opportunity of making Bull a European and US outlet for far more of its products , faces a price war in its cash cow personal computer business back home and faces such a hard time that it has just seen its debt ratings cut — at a time when cheap capital is no longer available in Japan .
11 The company is now in a regulatory climate where no objection would be made to either of its corporate investors , NEC Corp and IBM Corp , each with around 5% , greatly increasing their stakes in the company — to perhaps 25% each — but IBM has no cash to spare even if it wanted to get more involved with a company forever at the mercy of the shifting tides of French policy and NEC Corp , which two or three years ago would have jumped at the opportunity of making Bull a European and US outlet for far more of its products , faces a price war in its cash cow personal computer business back home and faces such a hard time that it has just seen its debt ratings cut — at a time when cheap capital is no longer available in Japan .
12 And despite the fact that it 's just been patched ,
13 that it 's just got no got no wanting to talk to her or
14 You prove to me that it gives just the very impression I desired .
15 You can collapse the outline so that it shows just the titles of each slide or expand it so that you see the text of bullet charts .
16 Consumers pay prices equal to marginal costs and this brings forth exactly enough output from the industry in the sense that it makes just sufficient firms viable .
17 Taken to its logical conclusion ( and the advantage of Baudrillard is that he does just this ) , this view entails a denial of all signification .
18 ‘ Gooseneck says he was pretty dotty even fifteen years ago , when he became a resident , and that he 's just got more so .
19 But what 's aggrieved me is that he 's just waltzed off with it and not
20 What he fails to mention is that he 's just been fined by his fun loving Durham County Cricket Club colleagues for turning up unshaven .
21 Yeah well it , it 's probably that he 's just got one .
22 Professor Sharp , of the Memorial University of Newfoundland , writes that he has just run across the earwig after having acquired five years ' back numbers of this magazine and to say that the Anglo-Saxons had a word for it , as we are all too well aware from listening to conversations between small children .
23 The speaker must monitor what it is that he has just said , and determine whether it matches his intentions , while he is uttering his current phrase and monitoring that , and simultaneously planning his next utterance and fitting that into the overall pattern of what he wants to say and monitoring , moreover , not only his own performance but its reception by his hearer .
24 Could my right hon. Friend reinforce the point that he has just made ?
25 I believe that he has just returned from his second visit to Nepal — a country with which this country has had good relations for about 175 years .
26 The hon. Gentleman does not need to rely on my words to rebut every word that he has just said ; he need only read the latest edition of the in-house magazine of the Confederation of Health Service Employees , where it is written : ’ The Mid-Glamorgan District Linen Service is efficient because it has no choice .
27 Can the Secretary of State confirm that , notwithstanding the encouraging programme that he has just reported , Nuclear Electric 's directors could not continue to pay the £1 million per day that it costs to continue the Sizewell B construction project if they were not covered by a letter of comfort from the Treasury , without which the company would be technically insolvent ?
28 Does my right hon. Friend agree that the answer that he has just given is further reinforced by the fact that several third-world countries , including some middle eastern countries such as Iraq , Algeria and perhaps Libya , are currently acquiring nuclear weapons ?
29 Can he give any sign of the time scale that he hopes will be achieved and what impact that would have on the energy ratio that he has just quoted ?
30 In the light of that , and of the answer that he has just given , would he care to contrast our policy with that of the Labour party ?
  Next page