Example sentences of "[adj] [prep] any [noun] [pers pn] " in BNC.
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1 | But never forget that He will forgive those who are sorry for any evil they have done . |
2 | We would be grateful for any publicity you can give to this event , including photographs . |
3 | 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 . |
4 | If any of Patrick 's family are still around , I would be grateful for any information they can give me . |
5 | 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 . |
6 | I will be grateful for any information you may have on private home care cooperative . |
7 | We had gone prepared for any questions he might ask , together with all the official documents regarding planning permission etc. and a collection of excellent photographic evidence of how we had set up the museum regarding exhibits etc. , taken by our good friend Russell Mulford . |
8 | All I know is that friendship with a woman is quite , quite different from any relationship you may have with a man . |
9 | This man was different from any other she had known . |
10 | 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 . |
11 | 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 . |
12 | It was different from any summer she could remember . |
13 | 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 . |
14 | 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 . " |
15 | That becomes very clear in any survey we 've ever done . |
16 | ‘ I ca n't imagine you being even remotely interested in any daydreams I 've had in the past , ’ he said with a slight twist to his mouth . |
17 | She was becoming less interested in any tittle-tattle he might purvey that might help her with the case than in himself . |
18 | I am here at the request of the English court and they , like Philip IV , are interested in any information we can send . ’ |
19 | Also , I was interested in any information you could give me on working in advertising or public relations on a music journal . |
20 | She felt somehow that her sister needed it , for it seemed only too probable that if Rupert was interested in any woman it was in Ianthe . |
21 | Do not be afraid to ask questions , particularly , perhaps , questions as to why things are done in the way they are — though you should for a long time be very restrained in any suggestions you make for improvement . |
22 | ‘ He was different , totally different — different to any boy I had ever met before — quite … quite uninhibited . ’ |
23 | The United Kingdom is a unitary and not a federal state , thus if central government is really serious about any policy it will get its way ( Griffith , 1965 ) . |
24 | If an offence is committed and the employer was quite unaware of any defect he is still liable for ‘ using ’ ( Green v Burnett [ 1954 ] 3 All ER 273 ) . |
25 | Before she was fit for any audition she needed lessons . |
26 | They worked hard for any money they got er but basically this was the idea that they could earn more money than say a joiner or a plumber or whatever , and therefore they had a wee bit of pride in themselves . |
27 | ‘ Declaration granted that before asking questions relating to an offence with which a person under investigation had been charged , the Director of the Serious Fraud Office was required to inform that person that he was not obliged to answer such questions but , if they were answered , what was said might only be used in evidence against that person where he was charged with knowingly or recklessly making a false or misleading statement or where the answer was inconsistent with any evidence he might give at a later criminal trial . |
28 | ‘ My husband 's Hearthwares are equal to any task he sets them , ’ she replied , her smile becoming frosty , like brittle icing on an old cake . |
29 | Miles , battle-hardened in the tough Australian school , rates Wigan as equal to any side he has played in . |
30 | That alone would be terrible without any danger she might encounter on the way . |