Example sentences of "[pers pn] in [adj] [pers pn] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Sir , may I in particular you sir , thank you for the unfailing good humour with which you have conducted this enquiry .
2 Think it 's used to you in that I do n't know what , I do n't tell Ron , well he knows how I felt cos I said course I 'm , god he said , is that a performance , he said I have n't sat on your knee for ages , I said no I just feel like it , before we went out and er , I said well I do n't think there 's anything the matter do you , I said with him back there saying make sure Mr Hudson has the notes , and he said no , he said , he said he would n't leave it seven months he said
3 I knew this to be true and believed firmly that when the word was given me in 1986 it would be fulfilled some time in the future .
4 She complains cheerfully as we enter saying , ‘ Jaz I 've never had so many people kissin' me in all me life , strangers and all , you 'd tink I was in Italy or England or America , God forbid ! ’
5 No , what I meant was , it was me in particular she was n't happy to see . ’
6 Squeeze them in sure we 'll find somewhere for them to go , vacate , so long as I get a kiss from everybody apart from the boys and
7 I only fill them in that I know for a fact .
8 Erm and it was rather a a and heavy work , you had to have a team of horses to pull a load of suedes and you had to get them in Some you used to carry out on and just drag them I mean s spread them out on the field er for the store cattle and the sheep .
9 When she left him in 1983 he was devastated .
10 Collinson 's first garden at Peckham was a modest one , but from there he took nosegays and potted flowers to grace his City window , and when Kalm visited him in 1748 he remarked on the many rare American plants already established there .
11 When I first came across him in 1982 he was playing for Exeter University in a sevens game at Twickenham .
12 WHEN THE originators of the Dart Valley Light Railway plc formed it in 1965 they always intended that it should be a commercially operated line rather than a ‘ preserved ’ railway , for having looked at the then contemporary scene they felt that there were enough preservationists at work already and that their nice for survival in an essentially holiday area should be revenue-earning profitability .
13 When Josiah Wedgwood visited it in 1773 it had ‘ the appearance of a considerable Seaport town .
14 In the dream , I was singing it in all me funny voices , from the squeaky one to the gruff one and it was a pile of bollocks .
15 We need we need four like that four quarters that 's good and then for each one of those when we 've cut it in two it would give us two of the new pieces so every one of those four would give us two new pieces how many would we have altogether then ?
16 And this is gon na introduce you to a new word called psychographic and psychographic , you think you 've got , you can break it in two you 've got the psychological aspects and the graphic or mapping , the mapping of the psychology .
17 Which was good for me ; if I had directed it in 1979 it would n't have had a chance . ’
18 It would erm , provide er , a base where activities could take place in that area , but whilst not , if you like , not directly benefiting the Social Services Committee , or the people that then go to it , would indirectly benefit us in that it would be available for youth and other activities in support of the community that have a knock-on effect er , as far as we 're concerned .
19 If Iran could help us in this we would be very grateful . ’
  Next page