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

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1 Then it hit me : stress perhaps I need stress !
2 No , so , Z two is the square root of two squared plus three squared so I want Z two square , is two square plus three square , different in square root , so the two times is two times , well two square is four plus that , , that is that .
3 And these sorts of initiatives of of people organizing together you know sort of .
4 It is largely this ability of the entire enterprise to pull together which gave rise to , and strengthened the myth : somehow , ‘ Laura Ashley ’ represented all that was best in traditional Britain .
5 We had these two things , we had to try to get women involved so I had women fronting For What It 's Worth ( Penny Junor , Sally Hawkins ) .
6 Just as he was about to come downstairs he heard Jonathan singing .
7 If this is not happening then I suspect fuel starvation .
8 Indeed , three of the mountains I mentioned earlier which surround Maol Chean-derag are Corbetts : Fuar Tholl , Ben Damph , and Beinn Bhan .
9 As we drew closer I recognised Liena , our interpreter .
10 When I got outside I found Mum in the yard , waving her arms about and giving directions to the neighbours whom she was organising for the party .
11 Anyway he , he says , he says right he says Tony , he says to Tony , Chinese boy says do you wan na keep your job he says no , keep your fucking job .
12 So they 're deliberately made so we get light out of them .
13 Thanks very much colleagues , er , that concludes the debate , but the C E C are er , are recommending exceptions of every motion , but in respect of some are asking for a statement to be made so I call Mick to respond .
14 IT 'S ALMOST impossible to define exactly what constitutes House at the moment .
15 What if when her husband came home he found Kemp already dead , and then he did all this stuff , you know , to cover up for her ? ’
16 ‘ When they came home I took time off a typing course I was doing so we could be together .
17 Because every person who comes in thinks ‘ this geezer 's gon na make me laugh because it says here he recalls Harold Lloyd , he 's a comic genius and he 's a continual delight ’ .
18 It is hard to define precisely what constitutes quality of life .
19 Yes she come yesterday afternoon I sat and I says I 'll have a go , I says then I had flu did n't I ?
20 Do n't watch then she answered chaffinch
21 ‘ You 're right ; at that stage I would have done almost anything to stop Kirsty falling into your hands .
22 ‘ I do n't think they would do almost anything to sell records or to get on .
23 There is a lunatic fringe of schools that will do almost anything to gain publicity — the head in the stocks and throw the wet sponge for 10p brigade do little to enhance their personal status or that of their schools .
24 Dad told her that it was settled but he warned her she must never borrow again He warned Frankie and me as well .
25 And when we got home we had ants in our pants ,
26 When Clarkson , a social worker , got home he sent Coventry a recorded-delivery letter , again asking for his money back .
27 As soon as I got home I rang Graham Fearnley and established that he would be at the Crystal International Tournament on Thursday , its opening day , and we arranged to meet after Jack Mason had played .
28 ‘ I took Fleck off and that did n't work so I took Le Saux off , put Eddie up front and he got a vital goal — and it 's the second time he 's done that for us . ’
29 Going inside she found people milling aimlessly around , others sitting staring vacantly into space .
30 Among the issues raised by this case were how the court was to go about deciding exactly what powers Parliament had intended to give to the GLC in relation to London Transport ; whether the GLC owed a duty to its ratepayers not to spend the rates on large subsidies for travellers ; whether the GLC was entitled to implement its cheap fares policy just because it had been a major issue in the recent GLC elections ; the extent to which central government ought to control local authority spending ; whether and to what extent public transport ought to be treated as a public service or , on the other hand , as a business which has to break even or make a profit .
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