Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] never yet [verb] " in BNC.
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1 | As with so many worldly matters , it was Lawrence who had introduced me to the gravel and grain method of 241 humane culling , but only the theory of it ; I 'd never yet tried it in the field . |
2 | I 've never yet met a claimant who could afford a television licence . |
3 | Yeah , I have worked all my life in various jobs and I 've never yet met a man who hated me nor have I hated any man , and I think there must be many women here who think the same thing . |
4 | I 've never yet met a child who did n't like chips |
5 | Again , this is a rule that can be broken , but I 've never yet seen a design with more than two needles tucking side by side . |
6 | However , I 've never yet had to use the ribber weights to make the machine knit , when using the main bed only , on any machine . |
7 | I 've never yet known a coal face or a driveway closed because of too much dust . |
8 | I have never yet seen him lose courage . ’ |
9 | It is said to drop at times to below 8 , but I have never yet lost it with 7 × 50 binoculars . |
10 | 1 National Trust membership card ( sounds simple , but I have never yet remembered to take it ) |
11 | Do you know , I have never yet found anything which closely resembled what we discovered in his mouth . |
12 | I would hasten to say that I have never yet had the misfortune to operate anywhere which possessed all these undesirable features , but every one of us has seen some of them , or combinations of them in different circumstances , and everyone knows , from their own personal experience , how demotivating these characteristics are . |
13 | We want ten and fifteen people stood there in the street , you want their T-shirts on because I have never yet had one person say to me , I wo n't sign it because I think they should shut . |
14 | Fabia arose on Sunday morning , thought of Cara , of Barney , and of the man she had never yet met but , with guilty conscience , hoped to , and then attempted to shed her anxieties by remembering that , with Františkovy Láznë being less than twenty-five miles away , Františkovy Láznë was where she was heading for that day . |
15 | She had never yet addressed him as Sir Joseph , because somehow he did n't look like a sir ; he did n't , in her eyes , fit the title ; he was too young . |
16 | ‘ We do n't say it 's impossible for anybody to add new motivated abilities in later life , ’ he says , ‘ but in all our research we 've never yet seen a completely new direction emerge . ’ |
17 | Now , given that so much of that pruning has already been done and given that even given that situation we have never yet reached four percent contingent er turnover savings , I think it highly unlikely and so do the officers , that they will be achieved this year . |
18 | Our own experience is that we have never yet planted a congregation without each person who is married getting as clear a call to the work as their partner . |
19 | They 've never yet had to use it . |
20 | He recommends the phrase ‘ care of the body ’ to be used in discussion with clients and continues to surprise us by telling us that in his experience of funeral-arranging he has never yet had anything but a positive response to , ‘ Would you like us to look after mother in our usual way , so that you will be assured of having an everlasting memory of her sleeping peacefully and at rest ? ’ |
21 | It had never yet had as its leader someone who represented one of the more extreme parties in the Church — never at least since the days of Archbishop Laud which ended in the archbishop 's head being cut off . |
22 | He had never yet seen her washed and dressed before he left for his game of golf on the way to the small art gallery that he owned in Brook Street . |
23 | Well , it makes a very good tale , only I do n't know if I could remember any of it ’ He beamed on Taliesin , and then said in an aside to Fribble that he had never yet heard of a Tyrian who did n't judge his wine remarkably well . |
24 | This , according to Wolfgang , would have distinct advantages : it would provide him with a legal outlet for the ‘ voice of nature ’ , which he swore he had never yet indulged , being too honourable either to seduce innocent girls or have dealings with prostitutes ; and a wife would be able to tend his domestic needs — he admitted he was no good at looking after himself . |