Example sentences of "[to-vb] [pron] [adv prt] all " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The problem for short people was to see them over all the people standing in front in the gallery .
2 Erm have to work it out all the time , this is erm this is one to two hundred and fifty thousand .
3 The answer is that you would have to slog it out all the way from London to Baghdad .
4 This does not mean we have to put ourselves down all the time : this would just be false humility , which is another subtle form of pride .
5 You know you used to put it out all the time . .
6 ‘ RRP will be introduced slice by slice so we can learn as we go along ; the risks are too big to put it in all at once .
7 You know we have to fight them off all the time .
8 was patting her back , trying to wake her up all the time
9 I have n't got to wake her up all morning , but Christmas Eve
10 And we we go in car shopping and we always get our s shopping from , you know with it being cheap , and we go in her brother 's car , and so we do n't have to carry it back all the way from , but round here you see you 'd have to go out , you 'd have to take the kid with you , and your girlfriend , and then you 've got to come back with all the shopping and your kids as well .
11 is it , ah , they used to be su , according to everyone he was such a so and so , he er , he 's , he used to be barmy , he was like the clo , close barmy man and he used to like chase people around with bricks and stuff and everyone used to hate him and like Julian and Andy used to beat him up all the time
12 Cash and Carry manager is back behind the counter after a short stay in hospital — nice to have him back all in one piece !
13 ‘ It 's just that I get real fed up with bozos like you trying to rip me off all the time .
14 council who do that and er , they 're quite happy to take you round all the er , take you down to the incinerator and see what happens , where all your different bits and pieces go .
15 ‘ I 've been too busy to take him out all day , and I do like him to have a little outing . ’
16 In assimilating a presentational form we have to take it in all at once , rather than sequentially , and there is nothing equivalent to grammatical structure underlying it ( 1942 : 90–3 ) .
  Next page