Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] [modal v] [adv] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 My Lords , this House and the courts have always been , and I trust will always continue to be , zealous in protecting Parliamentary privileges .
2 It stopped being a dream and began to be what I pretended could really happen . ’
3 And it was a lot lot of fun you see , to get in there I hope will never hear this , to get in there and squeeze her .
4 No industry that I know would ever have publicly exposed such a failure and their frankness in so doing should do nothing but increase public confidence in the honesty and integrity of those concerned and also in their total commitment to the safe and efficient operation of the station .
5 Apart from portraits , arguably the two greatest pictures that Queen Victoria purchased were Frith 's ‘ Ramsgate Sands ’ , an endearing masterpiece which for all I know may still hang in the waiting room at Buckingham Palace for the amusement of visitors , and Leighton 's ‘ Cimabue 's Madonna carried in procession ’ , acquired from the Royal Academy in 1855 and now on permanent loan to the National Gallery .
6 Erm I 've been off work in excess of five years now er add my income has been very very small and whatever award I get will never go ahead and compensate me or my wife for what I 've been through .
7 Another suggestion has been that the only solution would be the fitting of a Rover SDI engine which I understand would also give much better mpg .
8 I would hope that whatever the County would put in place would encourage the w the , the waste collection authorities currently the district er councils actually to offer at doorstep collection arrangements wo which I believe will substantially increase the amount of , of waste that could be recycled .
9 I feel would never wish to give up or reject feminism , which I see as an insistence on putting women first , an insistence on women 's autonomy and I think that the debates with National Liberation struggles , the debate in the Irish National Liberation struggle has seen the two things as going hand in hand .
10 The Roy I knew would never take that from anyone , not in a million years . ’
11 And so did a good many people who I , I thought would never go .
12 In fact , it was just about the very last thing I thought would ever happen .
13 Well no not so much that but , but I 'm not , I 'm not sure that other lady , the one whose baby was born just after er before Becky you see and I thought could just imagine her being saying going and saying something and getting , it getting moulded a different way , you know ?
14 Any job I took would also have to be fitted around me travelling to and from Harwich .
15 What , you could then do which I think would probably help , cos you see you do n't get State Retirement Pension till you 're sixty five
16 And these are people , not just those on the streets or in the shelter , night shelter or er in a temporary hostel and so on , but also people who find themselves in er accommodation which none of us I think would really want to call home .
17 Erm the principle aim of the new settlement would be to meet the needs of Greater York and one area that I 'm afraid has n't been considered yet , but which I think may well come out in connection with the employment policies in due course , is whether or not a new settlement in Selby would actually conflict with the underlying policies of Selby for development .
18 And when I took over the magazine I said let's just use the typefaces that they use in the newspaper and supplement them for some headlines , but try to make it belong in the New York Times .
19 As soon as I had the diet ready for issue at the classes , Pat was first on my mental list of people who I hoped would particularly benefit .
20 The provision of state pensions for such people was a welcome addition to the incomes of the extended households they almost invariably belonged to ; it supplemented and sometimes replaced the help which lineages would otherwise have given .
21 A major subject area with which NAB will certainly have to get fully to grips is initial teacher training , and it has recently announced its intention of examining this area in time to make recommendations for 1984–5 .
22 It seems that there are some minds which travel will never broaden : vulgarity , riotous behaviour , high spirits and horseplay have scandalized the establishment since the birth of tourism — the 1980s Costa Brava lager lout had his parallel in the Victorian excursionist .
23 Lucien immediately recognised the movements of the dance as being those of a classical piece : Paradouze being taught the sequences of the Vibrancy by His uncle , the cat-headed snake Smoobillow , a body of knowledge which Paradouze would later pass on to humankind .
24 The case , brief and obscure though it is , might well have provided a basis upon which judges could later have built to develop a principle that money demanded ultra vires by a public authority was prima facie recoverable .
25 The expertise of the adviser in the particular problem which emerges will doubtless influence the proposed course of action ( which might include a referral ) but the preliminary advisory skills may be possessed by a volunteer as by a professional .
26 Is this a conclusion which Nozick must simply accept , abandoning his claim to total success and pointing merely to the admitted partial success ?
27 Voters had to decide in conscience ‘ whether other factors outweigh the damage which divorce would certainly cause to individuals , to families , to children and to the whole of society ’ ( Irish Times , 13 June 1986 ) .
28 The plain fact is that even in a deposit based account , unless you 're a non-tax payer , any interest you make will already have had tax deducted and you may find your money is probably doing no more than keeping pace with inflation .
29 The amount and type of fat that you eat can seriously affect your heart health .
30 Erm , what type of things do you think would actually affect that decision ?
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