Example sentences of "[verb] [pron] [adv] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Between demonstrates how a multiplicity of different discursive systems intertwine to form the substrata of an individual mind which plays them off against each other , combines them and uses them to generate the repertory of stories that determine how she ‘ reads ’ the world in which she lives . |
2 | I 've heard them before like that , distanced but there , singing beyond the night in a daytime of their own . |
3 | Erm , I found out today , that I did n't realise she 'd actually passed a c , a beautician 's course , so I do n't know why she 's taught me out of all , has n't taught me how to go on . |
4 | It should be noted that , despite the historical primacy of arithmetic calculation as the raison d'etre for computers , we ought perhaps to see them instead as symbol-processing devices . |
5 | And after that she seemed happy the rest of the way , saying how lovely it had been to see them even for such a short time and how she 'd come down again when she could , but it was such a long way and the trains were so crowded with soldiers and she had had to take two whole days off from the ambulance station . |
6 | Nobody has come to see me today about that and I think it is disgraceful that the surgery has been disrupted , ’ he said . |
7 | Deemy was on hand next morning at sunrise to see me off aboard one of the transport planes carrying some 40 young pilots en route to Fairbanks . |
8 | And when you were doing these with lots of you 've got now got W X Y and Z in , when you 're adding up if you lay them out like that |
9 | It turns them away from looser , unstructured organizations . |
10 | You can work on those and you can build them up in two or three or four year 's time job changes this might take a bit more of a a higher priority . |
11 | Funded by the European Community , the World Association of Nuclear Operators is co-ordinating an international effort to improve operating procedures at Kozloduy and bring them up to international safety standards . |
12 | ‘ Then bring them down to Central Gardens , where we hope to have the biggest can collection ever seen in the region or perhaps the country . ’ |
13 | If not I 've only got to put them up in the attic and bring them down in three month 's time . |
14 | The laity had a pale reflection of this programme in the parish mission , designed to convert the laity or at least bring them back to regular church practices . |
15 | Trevor Senior had given the Conference side the perfect start , firing them ahead after seven minutes . |
16 | It did n't matter how innovative the products I set out to market actually were , I could not prevent myself from seeing them already in some illimitable bazaar of the far future , long obsolete and hopelessly dated , so much cosmological car-boot-sale fodder . |
17 | They wo n't want me here with all this happening . |
18 | A cash book should be maintained for each bank account to record every item of income and expenditure , analyse these into appropriate costs and back them up with supporting documentation . |
19 | ‘ I do n't want the feckin' Gardai pullin' me up for drunken drivin' . ’ |
20 | Well , do you want to go to Phillips and , I mean he kicks them out in two weeks . |
21 | This woman who , who keeps phoning me up about all this oil pollution on her land . |
22 | But he put up no defence ; he simply raised his hands and laid them lightly on Gentle 's shoulders . |
23 | Once they had turned the Mount , with the full span of the ice shining before them , the two men gathered pace , at once in harmony and contention , drawing vigour from the presence of the young woman between them , who cried out , not in fear but encouraging them on to greater exertions . |
24 | Nicholson led them through to another solid steel gate . |
25 | ‘ Paste me again with that stick of yours and you 're a dead Scotsman , Patel . ’ |
26 | And they did n't really want them back at that time . |
27 | Where the eye often used to be bruised by hectic entrances and exits , Page now keeps his dancers on the stage , shifting them around in complex patterns or gathering them up in long architectural phrases . |
28 | It is beginning to be recognised that proficiency in more than one language often carries with it the need to be what one might term ‘ crosslingual ’ , that is , able to generate connections across languages rather than only using them independently of each other . |
29 | There are not enough — but it is absurd that , under present arrangements , they and others with specialisms have almost no chance of using them directly with other teachers or with children . |
30 | To generate a biological molecule like haemoglobin , the red pigment in blood , by simple sieving would be equivalent to taking all the amino-acid building blocks of haemoglobin , jumbling them up at random , and hoping that the haemoglobin molecule would reconstitute itself by sheer luck . |