Example sentences of "[noun sg] always [verb] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Until 1980 the vote always went against television , although the margin was narrow . |
2 | For one thing he certainly over-states it when he says that pleasure always comes from satisfaction of an antecedent desire for something other than pleasure . |
3 | TV-watching always dropped in summer , with differences of up to 20 per cent between winter and summer averages . |
4 | whose inner strength and resourcefulness always prevail over life 's obstacles , |
5 | Young boy always used to muck about with |
6 | My heart always jumped with fright whenever I saw one of my poems in print , because I was sure it would contain one of the misprints whose steady drizzle has haunted my work all my life . |
7 | His reflection was fed by information from a wide variety of sources — from the presidential staff at the Elysée , from his ministers , from officials and experts , from the abundant official documentation that passed across his desk , and from the media ( he read all the major French newspapers as well as the Daily Telegraph , the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung , and the New York Herald Tribune , and his normal weekday routine always ended in time for the eight o'clock television news ) . |
8 | The famous second law of thermodynamics says that entropy always increases with time . |
9 | Moreover , a Marxist-Leninist analysis of foreign-policy formulation in the United States ( which would have been accepted by Guevara and also by Raúl Castro , both extremely powerful figure ) implicitly makes two assumptions which have been shown to be inaccurate : firstly , that the ’ bourgeoisie' always act in concert , and secondly , that the ruling group has control over the statements of major Interest groups within society . |
10 | Why mankind always goes to war . |
11 | Over this time we have continuously expanded and developed our range , with the highest priority always placed on value for money and customer care . |
12 | ‘ Father always kept in touch with Peter and he planned to come and see us when he got leave from France , where he was stationed . |
13 | The swallow always builds in mud , British song-thrushes always mud-line their nests , the weaver-bird never experiments with alternatives to hanging baskets . |
14 | to me , electric , the plus always goes to plus and the minus to minus , you ca n't mix them up . |
15 | Nor , of course , did the church always disapprove of war — the English coronation service made clear to the king that he must protect his people , and symbolised this with the gift of a sword . |
16 | In this case , domination is regarded as a universal and ineradicable feature of human societies , explained either by innate differences among human beings ( Pareto , 1915–19 ) or by the superior power which an organized minority always possesses in relation to the unorganized majority ( Mosca , 1896 ) , although in Mosca 's work some concession is made to the view that the progress of democracy reduces the gap between rulers and ruled . |
17 | Given the assumption that aphasia always occurs after damage to the speech-dominant hemisphere ( which , of course , will not be the case where damage is restricted to regions outside the language areas of the brain ) it is possible to estimate the expected upper limit ( EUL ) for the frequency of aphasia generated by a particular model of speech dominance in the population . |
18 | The yonil always hunt by night . |
19 | You can combine the pirouette with the hovering circuit by turning around and taking the model around too , as before , but with the model always pointing into wind ( Fig. 7.4 ) . |
20 | As a key principle the Profitboss always manages for consistency . |
21 | Country always comes before club , but someone could try a better job of arranging fixture to avoid such problems . |
22 | That shift from the irreplaceability and loss imposed by the cut to the resumption always allowed by interruption suggests again something of the difference of television , and the inappropriateness of a theory of subjectivity which takes castration as a defining moment . |
23 | My room looks out over a croquet lawn , at the end of which is a pond thickly planted with papyrus — the eponymous plant always mentioned by school teachers in any history of written language — in which , I know with certainty , all hell will break loose as dusk falls . |