Example sentences of "[adv prt] [prep] [pers pn] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Do you want me to sew this back on for you babe ?
2 Back to front , cos he 'd be carrying a lot of of hay on his back and that was to stop the hay seed , going down between it shirt and his skin .
3 I come in for me rosin and you 're lying on the ground .
4 Thus when a Lancashire miner died , his widowed wife went into service as a living-in maid with a doctor and ‘ put us in with me grandma ’ .
5 And He will stretch forth His arms to us , and we shall fall down before Him ad weep , and we shall understand all things .
6 Everything seemed to fade then , weirdly , leaving only one real object to stare at ; and she went to the mantelpiece and took down from it Undry .
7 Och away in wi ye Inverdarroch , ease yir feet oot o' yir wellingtons and come ben next tae the fire fur a wee dram , it 's great tae see ye is n't it , Murdo ?
8 Cooking down to you boy !
9 Behold , I stand at the door and knock : if any man hear my voice , and open the door , I will come in to him Revelation 3 : 20
10 I 'm here to tell you that if Alan is right and big Arnie ( pictured left ) did the body beautiful business behind the Co that night , anyone who happened to take a photograph of him should send it in to me pronto .
11 Balliol also agreed to repay Edward for the help he had given in preparing the expedition by handing over to him land worth £2,000 a year to be selected from those parts of Scotland adjacent to England : in effect , the southern counties of Scotland were to be permanently ceded to England .
12 Trouble is it only comes on like it sort of early hours of the morning yeah .
13 So , he got me handbag and took off with me bottle of DFs and me book from the social and said he 'd give it me back once he 'd cashed enough to pay the bread off .
14 He was having it off with me sister at one time .
15 Then he came in er sort of right at the end said , well look , I 'm so cheesed off with you lot
16 She splits me off from you lot , I 'm really fucked off actually cos like when I just go to dinner I just go with bloody Marina and then I sit there and I just do n't say a word and no one ever talks to me .
17 The citadel is not open to visitors , but the hill it stands on is a good spot to zigzag your way up to , to look out over the town , the river and its basin , and the valleys that go off from it north , south , east and west .
18 You know all about what 's going on ; and it 's been going on under me nose .
19 ‘ Begging yer pardon , ma'am , but … well , I 'd rather get on with me work , if yer do n't mind .
20 ‘ Well polish up your blood-hound and get on with it shamus .
21 Get on with it boy !
22 R : in those days + when we were young + there was no local fire engine here + it was just a two-wheeled trolley which was kept in the borough + in the borough eh store down on James Street + and whenever a fire broke out + it was just a question of whoever saw the fire first yelling ‘ Fire ’ + and the nearest people ran for the trolley and how they got on with it goodness knows + nobody was trained in its use + anyway everybody knew to go for the trolley + well + when we were children + we used to use this taw [ t– : ] + it smouldered furiously + black thick smoke came from it and we used to get it burning + and then go to a letter box and just keep blowing + open the letter box + and just keep blowing the smoke in + you see + till you 'd fill up the lower part of the house with nothing but smoke + there was no fire + but just fill it up with smoke + just to put the breeze up + just as a joke + and then of course + when somebody would open a window or a door the smoke would come pouring out + and then + everybody was away then for the trolley + we just stood and watched all of them + +
23 ‘ What 's going on with you lot ? ’
24 Come on wrap it up for you daddy .
25 I ca n't get up out me bed any more without somebody helping me , so I sleep in that chair .
26 The rate of pay is such that she must be genuinely fond of children to want to put up with them day after day !
27 Of course you see they 're growing up with them sort of things , we
28 And a Liverpool painter 's son , who after his father died ‘ was brought up with me grandmother ’ , calling her ‘ mother ’ , chose not to return to his real mother when she remarried and could offer him a home again : ‘ They 'd brought me up , and it would n't be fair for them to take me after from rearing me . ’
29 I was padded up with me mate and she says I just went weird .
30 WHAT 'S UP WITH YOU LILY .
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