Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb base] [conj] [adv] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 But I mean that yesterday afternoon you 'd have thought the bloody things were in here would n't
2 I hate that kinda bastard
3 I hope that both Stagecoach and Strathtay will be successful .
4 Now I hope that only Kelly has been doing things as desperately wrong as Kelly has been doing them .
5 Outside Cabinet Leon Brittan argued in a speech that the Government must have the right to look at new ideas , although I suspect that both Leon and Geoffrey Howe must have been appalled at the way the issue had been handled .
6 I know but all West Country .
7 ‘ Of course , ’ he said , ‘ I know that nowadays people conduct their marriages differently .
8 I understand that actually Mr Kinnock was n't being brief this time .
9 I believe that only God could have saved her , but for some reason — perhaps her fear or our fear for her — we could not realise His mercy . ’
10 I find that only eggs on the outside of the mass are likely to hatch , and have developed a way of maximising the hatching rate .
11 If such application was to be made to the court I feel that further references to your business acumen would have to be supplied beforehand .
12 And I think that even patients with lung cancer find it impossible to smo , stop smoking That is , perhaps , not so important , but what is much more important is that their families find it impossible to stop smoking !
13 Well I think that probably Neil 's clothes will have to go back in a Marks and Spencers
14 I think that generally organisations are squeezing out a lot of fat at that level simply because they 're finding more efficient ways to organise themselves to do the work .
15 Er we actually need to withdraw from but I think in relation to the other business about the erection of the I think that essentially routes are agreed without er without so perhaps it 's structural erm maintenance .
16 Well , I think that really education is going to be the most important thing .
17 So I think that really sort of covers that particular point .
18 I think that often people did n't realise how tired and desperate they were until they 'd sat with her for a while .
19 erm I think that perhaps John Major might be a little more friendly , although I believe his views are similar , his approach may be different .
20 I wonder whether eventually admissions will be possible only during working hours but not during lunch or coffee breaks .
21 I notice that neither John Scales or Alan Kernaghan have moved clubs yet so there is still hope that we 'll purchase one of them .
22 You will have to pay interest on any money you borrow and usually administration fees will be charged .
23 This is particularly important when you realise that only 30% of West Belfast residents who are currently working actually work in West Belfast .
24 ‘ And you say that only Sir Thomas , then Sir Richard and Lady Isabella 's maidservant , went along the Nightingale Gallery ? ’
25 It strikes me as a great idea , and it 's hard to see how they can lose when you consider that 2000AD magazine sells 300,000 copies a week .
26 Jones went like that to her and she 's , Cat 's following her you know and then Jones got up on the wall and Cat was looking at her and Cat was going like that and Jones was going chee chee like that and then , you know the fence there ?
27 she did n't say well er my husband brought me here because it was a decision that she had parted , it was a choice she had made as well and so she , she excepts her responsibility , she excepts her blame and she goes to return so there was , there was this sense of confession and , and confession can be costly when we 've got to admit that I was wrong , I did wrong , I was mistaken , I went the wrong way that could be a costly mistake and , and , and er costly experience for us to go through , but surely the , the true sign of repent is that we do acknowledge our sin , we acknowledge our failure , that we acknowledge what it means to god , we ca n't shift that blame onto somebody else then also consider not just the cost that Naomi had to pay in going back , but also there was a cost for Auper and for Ruth as well as Moabias there would be little joy for them in Israel , they were foreigners , they were strangers , there would n't be much hope for happiness for them , there would be very little likeliness for them ever getting married in or remarrying er in , in Israel , they would n't be able to worship there own god , they 'd be taken from one culture to another , there 'd be taken from one language to another , what was it gon na be like for them , alright , perhaps whilst they were living with Naomi perhaps she could pull a few strings for them , but what happens when she goes and they are left by themselves and yet it would appear that with Naomi making her decision to return that they too these two daughters in law they decided to go to Bethlehem with her and it tells us that they set out together but perhaps they had n't thought it really through because their not totally committed to us and as they come towards the frontier and their gon na pass into in , back into Judah with their few miserable possessions that they 've gathered together , Naomi again considers the consequences facing these two young women , Auper and Ruth , they continued with her , as she pleads with them to go back home , Judah is no place for a foreigner , Judah is no place for somebody to come unless they are part of gods people , and I 'm reminded of again of what it tells me in , in the book of acts , that in the early church , that people were actually frightened , frightened to join with the disciples , they were frightened to join the church , there was no room for , for stragglers , there was no room for hangers on , there was no room for those who went just because they thought it was gon na be the next , the in thing to do , but folk were actually frightened of joining because they knew they had to put their lives right , they knew they had to live holy lives , they knew that god had to be lord and master in their lives and unless they were willing to do that and be committed to him they were actually frightened of joining and one of the great weaknesses of the church today is that it becomes and it can becoming our thinking and nothing more than just something we join , something we belong to , something we go along to er as like a club , like an association , but that 's not the picture we see it in the New Testament , it is a very exclusive body , it is a very exclusive grouping , a grouping of those who have committed themselves to Jesus Christ and that 's why not every body is a member of the local church , not every body who goes to church on a Sunday is a member of a church to Jesus Christ now they know if they are , but other people may not know , they know and the lord knows , I know if I belong to him and he knows if I belong to him other people may not , I can put on the act , I can look as though I 'm playing the part , I can go through the routine , I can , I can , I can fool every body , but he knows and I know , and he knows and you know and so Jesus said not every body who says lord , lord on that day will I acknowledge and recognize and so for Ruth and Nao er yes Ruth and Auper it was gon na be different of course for them as foreigners in Judah especially when Naomi goes and she pleads with them go back home , Judah is not place for Moabias , she knew what it had been like to be a foreigner , she knew what it had been like to be an alien land in an alien culture in a different religion with a different language she had known the bitterness of it all , she pleads with them go back home she prayers for them the lord bless you , the lord you know be gracious to you and so on , but they refused and again Naomi puts it to them , to please go back and Auper reconsiders and she takes the counsel and advice of her mother in law but no so Ruth and Naomi turns and says look your sister in law 's gone back , she 's gone home , you go as well , you ca n't do it , its a too greater price for you to pay , its a choice you must n't make , a decision you must n't make , your gon na have poverty , your gon na have loneliness , your gon na have hardship .
28 You argue that either luck or strength is needed to kill without firearms — yet , in 1989 alone , 3,458 Americans were cut , slashed , or stabbed to death , and another 1,128 were bludgeoned to death .
29 ‘ Television viewers all over the world will now see the quality of the entertainment we provide and also northerners doing what they like best enjoying themselves .
30 In both books we have to read to the very end before we are relieved of the fact that we know that both Imamu and Boo , are genuinely nice people .
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