Example sentences of "[pers pn] do in the " in BNC.

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1 I actually feel more at home in Britain and in the States and France than I do in the North .
2 I share the hon. Gentleman 's views in the context of the six-week-old baby , just as I do in the context of the children in the school playground who were under threat this morning when the attack was made on the taxi driver .
3 It is , however , right and proper that we do report to this sub- committee on the activities of the staff commission , and that I do in the paper before you .
4 and that one and so erm what I do in the Summer as you said , when the sun 's sort of at two o'clock
5 Most of my work I do in the evenings when he 's in bed , ’ Ashley explained .
6 I think anything I do in the future is going to be purely from home consumption or from places
7 Of course in rural situations this can be overcome by merely peeing outside , a course of action not open to you in the city , unless of course you live in London where it does n't matter much what you do in the street .
8 Nottingham Graduates have always been proud of their association with the University and you will find a special welcome form them wherever you go and whatever you do in the future .
9 You take rather a long time sometimes to find something that fits in but you do in the end . ’
10 Networking , I said , is what you do in the corridor outside the plenary session of the annual conference with that interesting chap from Stanford working on a similar problem .
11 And this is the last thing you do in the surgery when a patient starts bleeding .
12 Erm swimming is recommended as about the most all round exercise because it certainly does your heart and lungs , it does all the muscles of the body , it , according to what you do in the water of course , I mean if you just go and stand there it does nothing
13 So what job is it you do in the factory ?
14 It was keeping the thing just like what you do in the land .
15 Like you do in the supermarket sometimes , when you can sense something behind you and you turn and there 's this camera , mounted at the edge of a shelf , swivelling its one black eye this way and that , like some malevolent goblin at the door to a secret cave .
16 ’ You have very similar motives in someone as charismatic as David as you do in the mute lad I played in Trapped In Silence .
17 Few women manage to look as good as you do in the mornings , Fran ! ’
18 Oh what you do in the cold , oh that was grand
19 It seems to me that you get these big moments in the life of the church , as you do in the life of any institution , historically speaking , and it takes a long time for you to discover what the effect of them is going to be .
20 Oh we ca n't do the campaigning like you do in the west .
21 Everything we do in the Christian life is easier than prayer . ’
22 Harmony is compromise in many cases , some countries doing far more than we do in the UK — full-range blood tests , for example .
23 Russians adopted the orthodox spirituality of the Greeks and it is interesting that , even after decades of Soviet oppression , they do not have the same problems about the reality they call ‘ God ’ as we do in the West , where Christians always behaved as though God could be discussed like any other metaphysical entity .
24 We often defend what we do in the most unusual ways — do you recognize any of these in you ?
25 Nor would we have an information system which carries every piece of lesbian information any of us can find , lesbian benefits to balance up the years of drag show fund raising , and a closed Women 's Caucus which supports whatever work we do in the organization .
26 The point is that the second version contains superfluous and irrelevant information , though this would not necessarily be the case if we were explaining what we do in the morning to an ( English-speaking ! )
27 ‘ But how are we ever going to listen to each other if we hold the views that we have about each other , and if we talk the way we talk to each other the way we do in the cases ? ’
28 By the stage we define broadly as intermediate , learners are some way towards developing control of the language they are learning : their store of language has grown to a point where they can adapt , adjust and add to it with some facility ; they can transfer language use from one context to another ; they are building up more complex networks of language and the work we do in the classroom at this level is similarly more complex and less controlled .
29 ‘ This means that we must concentrate on our most worthwhile projects to make sure that the things we do in the future are profitable at $19 a barrel .
30 Among no other peoples in the New World do we find , as we do in the realm of the Incas , a slow and gradual absorption of the individual by the state .
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