Example sentences of "[adj] [noun sg] [pers pn] [verb] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 That afternoon we watched television , which was full of the anglers ’ strike at Lough Corrib .
2 until that hour we parted company .
3 We agree that the specific algorithm we used wold have been inappropriate if we were interested in examining seasonal or short-term changes in primary production , not because the algorithm does not include a grazing term but because it does not include terms for irradiance and quantum efficiency .
4 Each spring it signals life with glaucous green ,
5 Is that the telephone 's fault d' ya think or is that fault I mean salesman coming in as well .
6 On the other side of this coin we find Chip Beck and Lanny Wadkins .
7 To evolve this framework it requires energy from its roots .
8 In this case we decrease cash by £200 and open a new asset column for the goods bought and put £200 in there .
9 In this case we include student nurses on Project 2000 because they are , like other college students , not eligible for social security benefit .
10 In the order of events this afternoon you see part of Psalm one hundred and three printed there which is part of the commendation at the occasion of the funerals of the departed .
11 In another hour they lost contact with the stream .
12 At another level it raised confidence in national identity and gave support to social science studies of Japan which stressed the way its unique cultural heritage underpinned economic success .
13 In this study we examined expression of L1 by macrophage subpopulations in the normal distal ileum using CD68 and S-100 protein as cell markers .
14 In this study we measured adenylate and guanylate cyclase activities and cyclic nucleotide values in the biopsy specimens of duodenal mucosa from patients with untreated and treated coeliac disease .
15 To the high command they conveyed aggression , but to the enemy they conveyed peace . ’
16 In this chapter we use MACRO as a mnemonic .
17 In support of this contention he quotes research done by Thorpe , who found in a study of long-term foster-children that only 27 per cent had contact with their parents every six months or more frequently and that over 60 per cent of natural parents did not know where their children were living , with only 21 per cent feeling encouraged by their social worker to maintain contact .
18 By this act he performed fealty .
19 ‘ Every country has another nationality they make fun of .
20 Jesus knew however , that before they would be ready to undertake this work they needed power , they needed a special power .
21 Wrap it around me like a Cupid-woven shawl and then let's dance together in this maze we call living , searching for the centre which we all know is death .
22 At this moment he heard Cowslip speaking .
23 And now he 's forty , unmarried and still living with that old termagant he calls Mother . ’
24 It tells us about his pride , humour , fixation with the Royal Family , longing for justice : but in pieces of this sort he loses touch with his gifts .
25 Her marriage was in ruins but here in this place she found peace .
26 This evening I visited Scouse 's latrine , the mosquitoes and all the flies were having a fieldday ; there were clouds of them hanging over the latrine in the still evening air .
27 At this point we make use of the homogeneity and isotropy of the space .
28 At this point I feel honour bound to remind Mister C that he 's talking to a journalist , that what might be an affectionate insult from his friends will probably piss him off massively when he sees it in print .
29 At Social Security they said nonsense , it must be Health .
30 When determining whether information is public knowledge they have regard to the form in which it is available .
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