Example sentences of "[vb base] [verb] [pers pn] [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | The British still tend to treat him with a faintly hostile embarrassment : as well they might , since for the past four years , his principal message has been condemnation of their duplicity in , as he sees it , backing away from promises to introduce democratic government by 1997 . |
2 | Secular books on the New Age tend to treat it as the latest fad ; the ‘ in thing ’ of the eighties , full of Alternative Types and quaint ideas about the ‘ good life ’ down on the organic , backyard farm . |
3 | Yes , just on the sub-ward level , of course there 's really , there 's a lot more investigations to go into targeting the resources , just I mean to target them in a city by having these standard mortality ratios for wards , but they 're all below ward level , and target the specific areas . |
4 | Foreigners tend to see him as a ‘ whingeing pom , brit etc. ’ and do not like the program . |
5 | Once women have reached senior management , for instance , where they are the only woman among 20 or 50 men , some companies tend to see them as the token woman singlehandedly proving that the company is encouraging and supporting women to reach the top . |
6 | LIKE BEAUTY , tawdriness is in the eye of the beholder , and on their country 's 40th birthday East Germans tend to see it through the cruelly unblinking eyes of thoroughly Westernised consumers . |
7 | If , as is postulated here , usage is determined by the meaning to be expressed , the answer must be that there are two different ways of conceiving causation in English , make representing it in a way that calls for the bare infinitive , cause in a way requiring the representation of abstract movement in time signified by to . |
8 | When psychologists study them specifically , they tend to observe them in a social , family or work context which loses sight of their individual subjectivities . |
9 | You want to see her in the morning when she bloody get up . |
10 | I said authenticity was one thing but did my devoted fans really want to see me on the big screen with spots a foot across all over my face ? |
11 | Two months later this tram-driver stopped me : ‘ I want to see you for a minute . |
12 | For example , although we do not have in English the grammaticalization of the levels of respect that exist in Javanese , we do have means of expressing degrees of respect , largely by choices in the use of expressions : thus ( 31 ) would generally be a more polite request than ( 30 ) : ( 30 ) I want to see you for a moment ( 31 ) I wondered if I could possibly see you for a moment So by taking at first just the grammaticalized or encoded features of context in the world 's languages , we would have both something like a " discovery procedure " for relevant functions of language , and a constraint on the relatively vacuous theorizing that often attends speculation about the " functions of speech " . |
13 | More than a third of directors want more summarised information and want to see it in a more comprehensible , graphic form . |
14 | If you want to hit me across the airport , I 'll understand , OK , but I 'm staying with Alejandro . |
15 | Want to nail him to the fence you should think he 's not |
16 | Well can I bring , say bring it to the meeting and . |
17 | ‘ I want to thank you for the roses , ’ she said . |
18 | ‘ I want to thank you for the last five minutes . ’ |
19 | As a novice in the game , I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart . ’ |
20 | ‘ And Joe and Biddy , I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for all you 've done for me . |
21 | She says we do n't want to destroy children 's innocence on the other hand we want to alert them to the dangers . |
22 | They 're ideal if you just want to lose it for a couple of hours , but try not to get hooked . |
23 | and that if we want to borrow it in a couple weeks time |
24 | Swap swap it with a duff one ! |
25 | He 's missing but I want to find him without the law knowing I 'm interested . ’ |
26 | She needed a back pack and she needed some soap and a tooth travelling tooth brush , eh , yes that looks alright , knock knock it of the . |
27 | I must look deep , deep into your soul and grow to trust you as a brother ! ’ |
28 | No say say it towards the . |
29 | Anyone else wanting to cash in on the end of the Cold War is advised to get a move on — there 's already been considerable interest in the Wroughton air yard and the agents expect to sell it by the autumn . |
30 | I am talking about prisoners who do not want problems in serving their sentence ; they want to serve it in a civilised fashion , where that is possible in any prison regime . |