Example sentences of "[pron] expect [prep] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Quickly , she put on her coat and hat , looking round fearfully as if she expected at any moment to feel Sikes ' heavy hand on her shoulder . |
2 | What is unique about the contribution you expect from each member of your team ? |
3 | It comes with the incredible value for money you expect from any product that carries the Valor name . |
4 | ‘ Well , what do you expect as personal assistant to a workaholic ? |
5 | The growth of the industrial proletariat convinced him that state education for all was essential , though in 1809 he asked : ‘ What can you expect of national education conducted by a government which for twenty years resisted the abolition of the Slave Trade ? ’ |
6 | The importer 's answer would undoubtedly be ‘ what do you expect for this kind of money ? ’ |
7 | ‘ What d' you expect with that thing on yer leg ? ’ |
8 | The installation is very professional as is the actual program , but what else would you expect from leading leisure company SIERRA . |
9 | Black and white cows grazed so picturesquely that one expected at any moment an eighteenth-century milkmaid to come prancing out from behind a white-blossomed bush with her three-legged wooden milking stool . |
10 | Not the sort of thing one expects of this generation , so all the more pleasing when one comes across it . |
11 | It expects to double output in Q1 . |
12 | Dominant social attitudes play a large part in suggesting to older people that ‘ disengagement ’ is what is expected of them — and ultimately it becomes what they themselves expect from old age . |
13 | Our experience of particular communicative situations teaches us what to expect of that situation , both in a general predictive sense ( e.g. the sort of attitudes which are likely to be expressed , the sort of topics which are likely to be raised ) which gives rise to notions of ‘ appropriacy ’ , and in a limited predictive sense which enables us to interpret linguistic tokens ( e.g. deictic forms like here and now ) in the way we have interpreted them before in similar contexts . |
14 | Canan and her boss know exactly what to expect from each other : ‘ It 's far easier for me to work for another Turk because I can talk about pay rates and things like that more openly . |
15 | She had not known what to expect from this side of marriage since there was no literature available to her on the subject and her mother had told her nothing . |