Example sentences of "[vb infin] [prep] a [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | It had been expected that a limited corp of staff would remain as a support unit after the last aircraft departs in January . |
2 | The compensation could not be increased if the council had lost it 's appeal and it would therefore remain as a maximum of £1 million . |
3 | Then you would remain as a group and could observe your own customs , those which do not conflict with our law . ’ |
4 | In the light of that , will he reconsider the abolition of vacation hardship allowance , especially as it was abolished in clear breach of undertakings given in the House that it would remain as a safety net following the abolition of social security provision ? |
5 | The General Herborising was also conducted by the Demonstrator who led his more expert colleagues further afield , sometimes to the coast where they would remain for a couple of days or more . |
6 | Soon this was to be entered and then only Tibet and Ethiopia would remain for a time unresponsive to European politics , ideas and technology . |
7 | In the past there has been an assumption that pupils ' attainment will dip as a result of transfer and a settling period will be needed . |
8 | That happened to Harry Porter in about 1927 when Lance Henly called after him ‘ Young Mr. Porter , do n't you think as a member of the Bank of England you should not be playing as an Artisan ? ’ |
9 | Do you think as a band you have a basic outlook that you all agree on ? |
10 | ‘ Let me think for a while . ’ |
11 | ‘ Ca n't think of anywhere myself , let me think for a minute . |
12 | Do n't think for a minute I 'm jealous . |
13 | Naturally I did n't think for a minute that my life and spirit could stimulate her . |
14 | I do n't think for a minute that I can work them out in movies . |
15 | I do n't think for a minute we 'll have to . ’ |
16 | I did n't think for a minute that if we ever met again you would so bitterly slap it back in my face with no regard for my feelings . ’ |
17 | ‘ When I got back and found your note I did n't think for a minute that it was because you thought I was the father of the child . |
18 | Right , well let's just think for a minute exactly what you just said , can you repeat to me roughly what you 've just said ? |
19 | Then the men-at-arms under the two banners , the King 's and the Earl 's , had waited outside , and the rest had got round the gate and walked talking inside : the King Macbeth with less meat on him , like a man who fed at sea , and Siward of Northumbria the way he always was , with his chest round as a shield under his tunic , and only his hair and beard greyer than you would think for a man not much past fifty . |
20 | It 's a frustrating affair though — do n't think for a second that you can breeze through this game ; think yourself lucky if you get past the first few levels ! |
21 | The effect is to make you think for a second that the church is only half there , that there must once have been a second side to it , to the right of the tower . |
22 | ‘ Well , now that we 've decided that nothing is going to happen tonight that does n't happen every Saturday night in Pepe 's Bar , tell me — why on earth can you even think for a second that Miguel is falling for me ? ’ |
23 | Do n't you think for a rock'n'roll band it is somewhat stupid to promote this government idea , especially here in Belgium ? ’ |
24 | But do n't think for a moment that I 'm duped by my own little lies . ’ |
25 | I 'd love to help her , and I know every one of us would ; but I do n't think for a moment that Miss Miggs would let us pay her fare , even if we could raise so much money . ’ |
26 | And I do n't think for a moment that I 'm alone in feeling this way . |
27 | Aggressive criticisms of assembly-line education such as this from the 1930s should cause us to stop and think for a moment . |
28 | Do n't think for a moment that the women are all on the creative side of the business . |
29 | He could feel the vibrations in his bones ; juddering the cradle he was strapped into , making him think for a moment that the tiny vehicle was going to shake itself to pieces . |
30 | I do not think for a moment that the Letter of Aristeas should be taken as a Festal Scroll , something like the Book of Esther , to be read in the Alexandrian synagogues every year on the day on which ( as we know from Philo ) the Alexandrian Jews commemorated the translation ( De vita Mosis 2.41 ) . |