Example sentences of "[subord] [adv] [pron] [vb base] " in BNC.

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1 It all comes down to practical implementation of flexible working hours and job sharing , so that women working in the nursing profession do not have to follow male patterns of employment , where eventually they find that combining family responsibility with work is simply too difficult , and they leave .
2 We come to a river , absent from my map , where suddenly I see the plains and both banks smeared with colour .
3 You have to develop that relationship because they can take advantage of you when ever and where ever they want . ’
4 Physical Changes The day after the lesson you may become aware of tensions in some muscles or you may feel an ache where previously you have had no trouble .
5 Nothing particular follows from the fact that he visits them once a month , except perhaps we infer that he has a close relationship with them .
6 Although personally we believe this to be of only secondary importance , its probable role in motivating innovative acts can not be ignored .
7 Not specifically other than obviously we do n't know at the moment
8 So , point six erm okay look at the sentences one and two under six , one is apparently ill-formed , herself left , except in I think some Irish dialects actually yes , well it has a rather special meaning where herself is given special status erm in the context , but in normal English , English herself left is ill-formed , but two , Florence saw herself is fine herself is a reflective pronoun refers that herself each other or one another , the other are reflective pronouns .
9 It 's a slightly different way of looking at neuron networks than perhaps we 've seen before .
10 Their knowledge of the area may be slight , it may be greater than perhaps we think , but they will not be able to tell the Chief Constable what to do and that is the glory of our system .
11 I think that the issue really is erm are there ways in which perhaps they could be helped to do this more productively , and are there ways in which they could be helped to do this rather more collaboratively than perhaps they have done so in the past ?
12 And er and with the wind sometimes the ball 's al that ball 's always running away from you and the way goalkeepers play now they tend to come out very quickly and more times than enough they get there first .
13 I 've got four , that 's more than enough you have any more than those .
14 In somewhat more precise terms than above we define the radiant exitance of a surface to be the radiation reflected by the surface in W. Curran consequently derives two dimensionless terms called reflectance : —
15 Er , I do n't know what , and I think he , we he sent for that book , I sent for this and its different issues which you can possibly used in erm P S D se er , etcetera and there 's a number which I feel work across the years rather than just you know , sort of one year book for example there 's a a unit there Terry and
16 ‘ Indian restaurants are always contacting us to say that they 've had celebrities in , and more often than not they turn out to be MPs . ’
17 More often than not they turn out to be admirers well versed in her background , and she finds herself answering the sort of urgent questions that ‘ normal people ’ ask when they are introduced to her : how is she settling to her new life ? ; does she miss Low Birk Hatt and her beasts ? ; is she taking care of herself ? ; and so on .
18 Food is scarce and more often than not they go hungry .
19 Sometimes these losses do not amount to anything important but more often than not they include the loss of some article of sentimental value which creates a strong emotional response .
20 At times the boundaries between these modes of address are exclusive , yet more often than not they shift to accommodate varying needs .
21 New houses may be built , but more often than not they compromise the setting of the house without generating funds to restore it .
22 Consequently , more often than not we have exchanged old rote for new .
23 Life on the margins characterises the Christian church in advanced industrial societies , and more often than not we do not even notice it .
24 We were allowed to help with the work of the farm , although more often than not I suspect we hindered the wheels of labour .
25 More often than not you get a refund cos of course you have personal allowances for a whole year but you 've not er not er lived a whole year as often as not and therefore there usually spaced over the twelve months and you 've paid a bit too much tax if you 've died in the course of the twelve months .
26 More often than not you have to work hard for a few fish .
27 Girls have got on through sleeping with a director , although usually they gain little more than temporary advantage .
28 Indeed we heard more than once I think yesterday , the district councils , they have no .
29 Contrary to the all too common belief that ageing is essentially an unavoidable process of retreat , of withdrawal into passivity and dependence , the truth is that for most men and women later life is a time of active challenge : a time when perhaps more than ever they need to be able to respond imaginatively to change .
30 As we move into the single market , it is more important than ever we keep our inflation level at or below those of our competitors .
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