Example sentences of "[vb infin] [pron] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Grey ’ issues of money occur whenever enterprises that are short of funds to pay their obligations insist that the banks should make them the necessary advances to restore their ‘ liquidity ’ .
2 Plus , of course , he admitted to himself wryly , the fact that the hours and the work do n't make me the ideal boy-friend , let alone husband .
3 You can shew me the exact spot and that will save time .
4 And how do we know whom the secret channels would enlist ?
5 I do n't know I the other day .
6 ‘ Money buys you certain things , but it ca n't buy you the simple pleasures in life like going around the corner into a bar and having a drink , ’ he says
7 ‘ Did you know who the prospective owner was , ’ asked the Captain , ‘ when you discussed these plans ? ’
8 You do not know who the rival bidders are , who wants what , or how much they are likely to bid .
9 The shot was supplied by Chris Baldwin who thinks the observer was Tony Buxton , does not know who the green-fingered pilot was , but knows they both survived .
10 We should shortly know who the new owners of Showerings are and what plans they have for the company .
11 Do you know who the official Society representative in your region is ?
12 At first I did n't know who the bearded man was for ( as I realise now ) I had been too busy participating to see .
13 ‘ I do n't know who the other five are . ’
14 In particular he thinks the educated should have at least two votes , he does n't say how many erm that 's a matter determined case-by-case I take it , erm erratically it could be a thousand votes I mean he does n't rule that out , he does n't say it has to be more than one er two , but erm his view is that the educated to a specially privileged in a specially privileged position because they are erm more able to use their vote sensibly or to be given more than one vote , so we need now there 's going to be a question erm how do you know who the educated people are to make such suggestions , anyone with a university degree will be pleased to hear gets more than one vote on Mill 's system .
15 I do not know who the hon. Gentleman thinks he is speaking for , but I remind him that these people are volunteers and join with the approval of their parents .
16 To allow large numbers of Southerners into their highly regimented society could unravel everything the Stalinist regime there has created in the last forty years .
17 I said I said well now someone can buy him the other one for christmas .
18 Occasionally I might buy him the big third Mac , the third Big Mac , just to prove to him he ca n't eat it , and this establishes in the superego a , that the , the superego to some extent speaks for reality and , and the reality sense is part of the , is part of the standards which are built into , which are built into the superego , and to , and therefore to a large extent the superego opposes the pleasure principle that operates in the id .
19 Though she had said she was too young for them she had been enraptured by them in a tiny jeweller 's in Pollensa but Fernando had hurried her away saying he would buy her the real thing one day .
20 things you see , so erm , I thought right well that 's it Ben can have the garage , I 'll go and buy her the flying circus , Joseph can have the bus and call it a day .
21 You can not guarantee what the resulting shade will be , though — you build up depth with subsequent layers — and you can get tell-tale streaking if you are not very careful with application .
22 Mr Ken Currie of the Energy Technology Support Unit at Harwell will then describe what the rich world could do to mitigate the effects .
23 ‘ I do not know what the final outcome will be and would stress that there is no obvious solution at this point , but at least we now have adequate time to look at all the alternatives . ’
24 ‘ I could n't for the life of me remember the English name for this vehicle and certainly did n't know what the Russian name was , so I asked him what he would call it . ’
25 Accordingly , one is constrained in the way which one can refer to the preceding paragraph in the printed document — because one does not know what the preceding paragraph will be .
26 It claims to be ahead of schedule with NT-on-Alpha , a relatively meaningless phrase since we do n't know what the real schedule is .
27 One of the bosses announced : " We do n't know what the real trade figures are going to be .
28 By the end of this week we shall know what the Labour Party no longer stands for , such as unilateral nuclear disarmament and full-scale nationalisation ; but what , in essence , does it stand for ?
29 I do not know what the Labour party is so proud of , because under the previous Labour Government manufacturing output fell by 2 per cent .
30 ‘ I doubt if they would know what the bloody hell you were talking about .
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