Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] [conj] they [det] " in BNC.

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1 That I mean if they all came up trumps that 's Nottinghamshire covered basically .
2 Now , however I realise that they all grow up in different stages and learn to do different things at different times .
3 Then just possibly — there were no guarantees with this sort of investment — he might let her have a child in return , if only to give him someone to abuse when they both got older .
4 Joe , I 'm not seeking to close down on discussion about item er , three , one and three , three but in view of the discussion we took this morning , you took this morning about the capital building programme and referring it to er , P A G , may I suggest that they both go that way , unless you have any particular comments to add to .
5 As I turned I saw no mark that the Incas had left on this landscape , beyond the forty-five terraces leading up to the thatched hut that I counted before they all became a blur .
6 I think that they each think this dump 's occupied by the other . ’
7 She says that they all thought they would have to look for other jobs .
8 You know that they all disgust me , and er , John went yeah , that 's the sort of woman I like .
9 I should think at that time the employers thought , Well we do n't want to be arguing about wages every five minutes during this War business you know and they all got b you know they got bags of work you know that of course , do n't you ?
10 She knew that they both considered it a good solution to the difficulties existing at present , and this was disturbing .
11 He could only imagine girls in the evening when they all walked along and Marie stopped in front of a shop window to see that her clothes and hair were as she wanted and they all came up behind her and did the same so they were like a group photograph on a record sleeve , wiggling their fingers and poking out their tongues and saying ‘ Yoo-hoo ’ to their reflections .
12 I know I thought that was good because then everybody puts the phone down you see and they all think they 're going to be terribly clever .
13 Now , if you had two horses up the front , you see th their heads are facing this way the engines , th starboard er , two engines you see and they all put starboard up first you know .
14 Thousands of different kinds of rocks have been described and separately named , but when one gets down to their chemistry , one finds that they all have a great deal in common .
15 In neither public nor private cases are we assured that they all lead to greater efficiency .
16 Miss Bedwelty arrived a few minutes after they did and they all piled into the factory .
17 Yeah , well they did because they all come in a quarter do n't they ?
18 They cooperate because they all stand to gain from the same outcome — the survival and reproduction of the communal body — and because they constitute an important part of the environment in which natural selection works on each other .
19 In 1770/71 Lagrange set about analysing the various methods then known for dealing with the general equations of degrees 2 , 3 , 4 and he found that they all depended on the same general principle ( see Section 5.2 ) .
20 Okay er the thirteen twenty five erm when it looks like they all went early .
21 He says that they both had a dream , to get take part in the Brighton races with the old tractor .
22 On the last day the instructor held a test , and like the others Tim passed , but he felt that they all would have passed anyway , that the man was there to sell the machine and that no one would be allowed to fail in case they did n't recommend it .
23 It means that they all have the same good view .
24 He did and they all edited it together a week later .
25 He said that they both loved ‘ exposing the bogus and pretentious ’ .
26 ‘ Come on , ’ he said and they both left Steed parked there and made their way to the twisted and bent railing that was his door to the family .
27 Only once had he returned after they all left and that had been bad enough , like a dream — no , like stepping into the set and scenario of some frightening film , a Hitchcock movie perhaps .
28 Erm , the , I first tell people what to do because they all know their roles , and when you go in in the morning , and you 're just basically going round checking that they 've already done it all .
29 I E th there , there is no guarantee within the May the fourth directive that , that the poor do significantly a as a group all do well because th th they , they , they , there 's nothing to guarantee that they all share properly in the fruits of struggle .
30 Liverpool supporters would have us believe that they all originate from the Kop , but this is doubtful .
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