Example sentences of "[noun pl] of [pron] [adv] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | Maybe he should have cauterized those aspects of himself long since . |
2 | Set up a lab like mine and run the same experiments , and anyone should be able to come up with the same results , for they do not depend on excessively mysterious skills or tricks , and science is after all , in the words of its most passionately admiring philosophers , public knowledge . |
3 | But you think it 's perfectly all right to talk about women 's tits and bums and stick pictures of them up all over the place . |
4 | Submission to central authority was deeply ingrained in its 150 years ' history , and the hospital was only now to throw off the last traces of its even more ancient deterrent purpose . |
5 | ‘ Did you see any signs of anyone else there ? ’ |
6 | Erm well but the the descendants of them still here . |
7 | In both , the characters drift somnambulistically through life , unconsciously impelled by emotions of which not only they , but also the author , can give little or no account . |
8 | For Scotland this would mean that in 1996 there would require to be approximately 7,860 psychogeriatric beds of which little under 4,000 should be in continuing care units . |
9 | Two more years of it then well You see as long as my wife had a career - it was only because of the little one . |
10 | John told me that it was a red-throated diver ; and those lovely creatures have remained favourites of mine ever since . |
11 | Yanto Gates was not given to quick decisions or mad impulses , but the girl in reality matched his dreams of her so perfectly that he had to take it as a sign . |
12 | In some cases it can be difficult or even impossible to find texts again ( for example if the text is a lecture , or a television programme ) , but you should still keep details of them as fully as possible , so that your reader knows exactly where ideas or words come from . |
13 | This is not explaining the relation in terms of something else merely restating it . |
14 | You 'll open those jaws of yours so wide the hinges will snap at the corners . ’ |
15 | Crop-protection guns were issued wholesale , the users of which as often wounded elephants as killed them outright , so that the surviving animals became even more dangerous . |
16 | It was the killing of Ephraim that troubled Gabriel most because she could see the mechanics of it so clearly : the boy killed in Charley 's old place , hidden in Belmodes during a public holiday . |
17 | New characters were emerging and I began to meet cutter stalwarts such as Denis Mawe , Dick Fidler , Doug Thompson on the deck side , and veteran engineers Joe Reynolds , Eric Langmaid and Alan Cull , the latter two great friends of mine now sadly deceased . |
18 | ‘ Little bits of it very well written . ’ |
19 | I started to think of the stories Henry Mendez had told about Russell , piecing little bits of it together now . |
20 | We took a couple of photos of him again today . |
21 | Big gulps of it much easier . |
22 | As it is often confused with the closely related Giant Gourami ( C. fasciata ) , reports of it further afield may be inaccurate . |
23 | My father worked in a market and he got big bundles of it very cheaply . |
24 | I live only half a mile from the canal , and visit those parts of it nearby regularly . |