Example sentences of "[verb] [verb] [pron] any [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Had she been asked that minute what her exact feelings were , she might have said , I have done what I can for Andrée , if she 's going to blow cold again , if she does n't want to see me any more , vogue la galère , I shall have to survive , I shall . |
2 | But she smiled again and said , " I 'd understand if you did n't want to see me any more , " and looked down , away from him , at her feet . |
3 | He had seen fear , and bravery , too , and savagery and oppression , homes burned down , wheels smashed off carts and farm implements so that the land could not be cultivated , crops ruined — he had seen it spread everywhere and he did n't want to see it any more . |
4 | Your old friends — your real friends — do n't want to see you any more . |
5 | Nobody will need to wear them any more . |
6 | Now a young man in the prime of his life is dead , and no-one has given us any official advice or information . |
7 | ‘ Once you 're sleeping with her regularly , you figure you do n't need to bribe her any more ? ’ |
8 | Er policy I twelve I do n't think has caused us any particular problems in Skipton which is where the main office developments have been er taking place , I think I would reiterate some of the comments |
9 | ‘ I still have a smooth face , a body without apparent faults … but no one wants to undress me any more , ’ she laments . |
10 | Certainly , it was quite a strenuous walk — though I can say it failed to cause me any real difficulty — the path rising in zigzags up the hillside for a hundred yards or so . |
11 | Anna coped with him all right , Giorgio never seemed to cause her any real pain ; her tirades , which used to be against the prince , were about Constanza who had ruined our lives by losing Simon . |
12 | At five past two Franco took the unprecedented step of refusing to serve him any more wine . |
13 | She went from room to room , praising the decor , and if she noticed the paintings they did n't appear to do her any obvious mischief . |
14 | But you 'll get in that darn cab and stop giving me any more hassle , even if I have to throw you in bodily like the little baggage you are . |
15 | But does the Windows interface give you any great advantage in learning how to type ? |
16 | But we 're not going to give you any more money . |
17 | Now you 're always making a balance in developing drugs and I have nothing to do with the drug industry , I 'm a G P , you have a balance between trying to move things forward to get people better and on the other hand making sure that you 're not going to do them any great harm . |
18 | ‘ And I 'm not going to do it any more . |
19 | I 'm not going to use him any more . |
20 | ‘ You 're not going to use me any more , ’ she told him quietly . |
21 | No , it 's not going to cost her any more , because it 's included in the plan , so it 's not going to include , so it 's not going to cost her any more |
22 | No , it 's not going to cost her any more , because it 's included in the plan , so it 's not going to include , so it 's not going to cost her any more |
23 | But what do you say , well the good news is , it 's not going to cost you any more . |
24 | Today , the Germans do not envisage doing it any other way either . |
25 | The non-assertive character of the first three is quite obvious : the conditional clause leaves the actualization of dare up in the air in ( 31 ) ; ( 32 ) implies " she did n't dare ignore him any more than that " ; ( 33 ) is a sort of indignant rhetorical question implying that he should n't have dared take the native 's part against her . |
26 | But she did n't dare let him any closer . |
27 | I do n't see the point in going mad cos you 're not going to get there any quicker |
28 | ‘ We 're not going to pay you any more interest , ’ cried the three little piggies in unison . |
29 | Well , watch out world , because Sarah 's not going to take it any more . |
30 | ‘ Are n't you going to ask me any more questions ? ’ demanded Taczek with a peremptory prod at his spectacles . |