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

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1 ‘ How you gwine ter keep deh Possum in his feedbox when I brings in deh Chinas and blackmen ? ’
2 And she goes up Parker school so she was going , she said to Ange she was talking to Miss tomorrow .
3 the girls of my school have to take the place entirely of the mother of the family ; the families are generally large ; the woman goes out in the morning , she works in a pickle house , if she is a better class woman she goes out charring , or she goes out step cleaning during the day and the little girl takes the place of the mother of the family .
4 She points out agencies must have licences and checks on practice are getting more stringent .
5 Well if she lives down Dawson , all she has to do is get a one O six to Clapton , right ?
6 She stands down Whitechapel with her legs open saying , come on over to my place .
7 This is indeed exactly what Moll does throughout the play , and especially when she beats up Laxton .
8 How to give such support is the crux of the problem , Ms Hewitt muses as she heads back south .
9 The faces around her suppliant , wary — she is in a benevolent lull , she measures out wit and wisdom .
10 PROUD A royal wave from Fergie as she shows off Princess Bea .
11 It is usually noticeable that when a masochist has for years felt hard done by , often over-controlled by their partner , and then for some reason the tables are turned , he or she metes out punishment as if this has to go on for the same length of time that the masochist 's suffering was endured .
12 At our interview at the Royal Overseas League she was about to leave for a pit-stop author 's tour , with an immensely heavy bag containing a laptop computer on which she fires off requests and thank-you letters : to American Secretary of State James Baker for his introduction to President Mobutu , to the King of Spain for agreeing to host a fundraising dinner for a chimp sanctuary in Spain .
13 She pores over time-tables : bus , rail , ship and plane , and travels her secret world in cookery-books .
14 Highly ambitious and competitive , she takes on responsibilities and makes decisions in a conceptual and intellectual manner .
15 Then she calls out compass directions or degrees .
16 Her name , she says , is Elena ; her dark eyes gleam with gay desperation , an impression fuelled by the way she tosses back glass after glass of sparkling wine .
17 She picks up tones and drifts rather than actual words .
18 The darkness of the beginning of the poem is suddenly illuminated to a ‘ low stream-line brightness ’ towards the end when she picks up speed and moves from a misty , black and yet dignified depression to a kind of elation .
19 She picks up speed in the late evening , after most of the passengers have eaten .
20 Her reaction , though , is physical — in a bar , she picks up Josef , a very improbable sex partner .
21 You stand there , back to the kitchen wall , while she fries up Larry 's favourite meal , which is sausages and mashed fish fingers .
22 Margarit 's attention is sharply focused , however , as she brings on stage a small mound of straw .
23 Once through the crust , tunnelling is easier and she brings out loads of sand , clutched between her forelegs .
24 and had control over Mrs with his stupid maid , whereas it 's sort of reversed , cos she has power over him cos she brings out character .
25 She carries out God 's cosmic functions of creation and sustenance .
26 She makes up stories just to turn you against me .
27 Well she comes up Friday and on Saturday .
28 oh dear , she 'll get them when she comes back Laura
29 We goes up town the following week then to get and I forget what I was looking for , oh it was I was looking for your blouse
30 The first verse concludes : We live at our pleasure , and take our delight ; We heapeth up riches and treasures great store , Which we get by griping the poor .
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