Example sentences of "[be] [adv] [adv] [adv] [subord] " in BNC.
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31 | It 'll be all right again when she 's gone . ’ |
32 | ‘ Will you be all right here if I go and stretch my legs for a while ? ’ |
33 | Young Gareth did n't want them to give up , they said , but Mr Vickers senior told him you 'd be all right even if you had got lost . |
34 | It 'll be all right soon as he gets it . ’ |
35 | It wo n't be all that long before Susan marries and then I 'll be a great-grandmother . |
36 | For the Stones , satisfaction was the goal : everything would be all ALL RIGHT if we shed the inhibitions that held us back and down . |
37 | It looks as if the day may not be so far away when we can all do our shopping , banking and working from our homes . |
38 | Furthermore it is possible for a high degree polynomial to be only slightly better than a low degree one ( even a straight line fit ) , whereas the higher degree fit will certainly require much more effort . |
39 | The individuals may function well in different compartments , and while they may have inhabited the same house for 30 years , believing they are together , they may , in fact , not be together as far as their hopes and expectations go , so it is terribly important that they voice these things to their partners . |
40 | ‘ Let's just be together as often as we can , really get to know each other . |
41 | I 'll be along as soon as possible . ’ |
42 | The extensive discussion of the topic in Chapter 2 led to rejection of the account offered by Wagner for habituation , but this may be just as well as far as his theory of latent inhibition is concerned . |
43 | One gets used to this , but it would be just as well when engaging astern gear to check that both blades have thrown before calling on any real power . |
44 | Perhaps it would be just as well if he paid her another visit . |
45 | ‘ It 'll be just as well if you do n't say anything to the group about it . |
46 | Er somebody said to me about her childhood experiences , well I did n't really survive them , I 'm just here still because I did n't die . |
47 | As the season did not begin until Christmas , this meant that they would be away considerably longer than originally intended , and so permission for additional leave of absence was sought from the Archbishop . |
48 | Any birthday celebrations always seem to be over as swiftly as they begin , and the anticipation is probably just as important as the event itself , but a pressed flower picture can serve as a lovely memento . |
49 | ‘ Most of us just hope this will be over as quickly as possible and that the Americans go home , ’ a diplomat said . |
50 | The minimum latency period should be not much less than ten times the period between offline runs . |
51 | I 'm not suggesting that erm , women magistrates would necessarily be any more just than men magistrates . |
52 | Would he not clear up and then be off as quickly as possible ? |
53 | It would be still more so if all the ways in which nucleic acid molecules can recombine had been included . |
54 | ‘ I will be still more so if you will have someone look to my horses . ’ |
55 | A lay person asked whether both his feet were off the ground simultaneously when he walked would probably be wrong as often as right . |
56 | She did not go on to explain that to remove anything would be wrong as far as she was concerned . |
57 | ‘ And I would n't be back here now if my dad had n't died . ’ |
58 | ‘ American would be back very rapidly if Stansted was given a much fairer opportunity to operate new routes , ’ added Mr Hobbs . |
59 | ‘ Valerie , ’ he said to me , ‘ I 'll have to take these two to my mother again , ’ at which the little ones set up an ungrateful wail , ‘ but I 'll be back as soon as possible . |
60 | He would be even more so when he was over the spotty stage . |