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

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1 Since joining Peter Owen 's stable for this season he is unbeaten in three starts .
2 But never forget that He will forgive those who are sorry for any evil they have done .
3 We would be grateful for any publicity you can give to this event , including photographs .
4 In the event , Ramsay himself made the most useful contributions to the debate , with the young Steward and Moray backing him , the Regent out of his depth and almost pathetically grateful for any guidance he could get .
5 If any of Patrick 's family are still around , I would be grateful for any information they can give me .
6 I would be most grateful for any information you may have pertaining to the RLS centenary be it an update of your present events or any contacts you may know of .
7 I will be grateful for any information you may have on private home care cooperative .
8 If you could maintain the illusion that your father was still alive for another fortnight you would be saving — say the property was worth one million — about 240,000 .
9 I really excit exciting about this thing you know and I wan na I wan na share it with someone like
10 Every ship must have a manifest for each port she calls at .
11 If the Roundabout itself is completely clear of other traffic you may take the shortest and most convenient lane through the roundabout .
12 ‘ Is there something wrong with that book you 're holding ? ’
13 What 's wrong with that penalty I saw it ,
14 Now if anything had been wrong with this shaft we used to have to go to the other shaft and ride that rope you see ?
15 All I know is that friendship with a woman is quite , quite different from any relationship you may have with a man .
16 This man was different from any other she had known .
17 He had written one poem since his marriage , dedicated to his wife , which is couched in a spirit quite different from any poetry he had written before — he had finally , he told Cyril Connolly , written a poem about love and happiness .
18 The difference this time is that it is someone they personally loved and therefore it takes on an importance quite different from any event they may have witnessed before .
19 It was different from any summer she could remember .
20 Or again , independent nomic conditionals come to this : Given the rest of the world as it was , or given that it was different in any way we can conceive it as [ icing , without logically " excluding a and b , then if a happened so did b .
21 As Lord Blackburn said in Bowes v Shand ( 1877 ) 2 App Cas 455 ( at p460 ) : " If the description of the article tendered is different in any respect it is not the article bargained for and the other party is not bound to take it . "
22 That becomes very clear in any survey we 've ever done .
23 If you feel that your award is wrong in some way you can ask for the decision to be reviewed or make an appeal — details of how to do this are available from social security benefit offices .
24 If you feel that your award is wrong in some way you can ask for the decision to be reviewed or make an appeal — details of how to do this are available from social security benefit offices .
25 If you feel that your award is wrong in some way you can ask for the decision to be reviewed or make an appeal — details of how to do this are available from social security benefit offices .
26 Red fish ( such as herring , sardines , kippers , and salmon ) are a reasonable , naturally occurring source of vitamin D. Eggs supply some of this nutrient , but not as much as red fish ; because eggs are relatively high in saturated fat they should not be the main source of vitamin D. Margarine has this vitamin added , but again is not the preferred source because a good eating regime should not be too high in fat .
27 But by crossing direct in this way she could more than halve the time to the keeper 's cottage , and this might mean that the keeper could get to the West Wood in time to capture the deer-stealers before they drove away .
28 If not dismissive in this way it is likely to be considered unimportant and never thought about again .
29 She was becoming less interested in any tittle-tattle he might purvey that might help her with the case than in himself .
30 I am here at the request of the English court and they , like Philip IV , are interested in any information we can send . ’
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