Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [be] [verb] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | They I 'd much rather be doing a hundred and three times seventeen . |
2 | Airbus will anyway soon be passing the hat around again for an enormous 700-seat aeroplane , much bigger than the Boeing 747 . |
3 | In time to put her shopping away before be brings the milk in . |
4 | The ‘ Auld Alliance ’ and the French Connection should more properly be called the Scots Connection . |
5 | On a miles per scream basis , there are lots of competent cars at a fraction of the Bentley 's price that could go that distance before getting too strident , and a Mercedes S-class would still only be whispering the odd complaint after 1200 miles . |
6 | Thus , neither Latin American political developments nor Latin American suspicions of the USSR — although either or both may lie behind isolated set-backs to Soviet policy — can any longer be considered a significant factor in the overall development of commercial relations . |
7 | Kenny 's Blackburn Magic ( PolyGram Video ) might more suitably be titled The Alan Shearer Show , so much does the prolific England striker dominate this one-hour collection of match highlights from Rovers ' barnstorming entry into the Premier League . |
8 | Er , we did it erm , er just after 1919 when er , er we started backing the white Russians and erm , before we write off erm everything the Communist er Government of er Russia has done over the last seventy years as being evil , what I think we 've got to be aware of is that we may once more be unleashing the forces of nationalism , which in 1914 , and I think of going up er in the period in the thirties very much lead to erm two world wars , and er I 'd like to know more about er some of the forces the so called democratic forces that are backing erm Mr Yeltsin . |
9 | This view , however , may be to perceive only as a weakness within the British scene something which may more interestingly be considered an incentive to , even a necessary condition of , modernist and postmodernist writing generally . |
10 | As a Membership incentive for 1991 we will once again be offering a FREE VOUCHER to all new members . |
11 | So although no route can more truly be called a " beaten track " than the one which heads for the Gotthard Pass , now that the old Gotthard road has been supplanted so far as through traffic is concerned by the Basel-Chiasso motor expressway ( E9 , N2 ) , many towns and villages on the old road can be rated as " off the beaten track " . |
12 | ‘ For these reasons I think there is a fairly strong case for marketing it as a health product but it will also probably be considered a luxury , ’ Mrs Rowan added . |
13 | A solicitor will often already be doing the conveyancing for you if the problem concerns a property you are buying or selling . |
14 | ‘ It has already been said that the Duchess of York will only make a fleeting visit with princesses Beatrice and Eugenie so it looks like that the two royal outlaws will now just be bringing the children to tea . ’ |
15 | He looked like a man who would far sooner be spending the afternoon at home , doing his boxes and listening to Bach . |
16 | The coalition group has agreed on nothing that could even loosely be termed an election platform , let alone a policy for governing the country . |
17 | She shivered as she thought of the creature who might even now be stalking the velvet blackness outside , looking up at the lighted windows , deciding whether or not to break in . |
18 | It could even now be starting the greatest revolution our British culture has ever known . |
19 | Mr Moynihan should even now be pressing the football authorities to cast around for an island where The Problem can be contained . |
20 | Out in his Blackheath ranch he could even now be interviewing an empty-handed burglar , plus whoever dared turn up from Vinnie 's gang . |
21 | Furthermore , the answers are written down , so the test could equally well be called a written test . |
22 | If the eighteenth century is often described by architectural historians as the great age of the English house , the Victorian period might equally well be called the great age of the English home . |
23 | PAKISTAN should today simply be hailed the world 's best cricket team . |
24 | An application by any local charity to hold such an event will almost certainly be given a standard reply on these lines : |
25 | In the latter case we would almost certainly be seeing the galaxy during its formation phase . |
26 | However , his grandmother will almost certainly be keeping an appointment on Thursday , a reception organised by the Church Army at Lambeth Palace . |
27 | The British citizen must no longer be denied the fair voting systems enjoyed by the citizens of every other European country . |
28 | When he reached the age of 19 and married Mary of Gueldres in Holyrood abbey , James could no longer be denied the full authority of kingship . |
29 | History , which can now no longer be considered a concept as such , is therefore made up of the incommensurable relation between these two disjunctive set-ups . |
30 | Although the landscape did not disappoint me nearly as severely as it did Johnson — subsequent farmers have grown many trees , and in the distance a great house still touches the sky — Monboddo may no longer be considered a classical Scottish fortified house . |