Example sentences of "[coord] [verb] [adj] time [pers pn] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | I ought to go and catch last time it was horrible ! |
2 | For this reason , many commercial relational DBMS enable links to be set up as an option and therefore they can be set up beforehand and executed each time they are required . |
3 | ‘ Well , lad , if that 's how you think , you may come and drink any time you feel thirsty . ’ |
4 | ‘ What is disturbing is conducting the National Youth Orchestra in Britain — wonderful , disciplined players — and knowing next time I will see them , in years to come — all that sense of orchestral order may be lost . ’ |
5 | ‘ I 'm on my way home from Oxford , and thought this time I 'd come through London and look you up . ’ |
6 | . But coming that time I was dumped in a in a field . |
7 | There can be little doubt as to what in the way of topics and register the Host expects in the Monk 's Tale ; he concludes his observations on Melibee with : and continues with a description of the Monk that matches with the impression " Chaucer " claims to have of the Monk in the General Prologue , of a " " manly man " " , straining at the bounds of what is allowed to a monk ( and not dissimilar to the monk of the Shipman 's Tale ) : After nearly a hundred stanzas of the Monk 's tragedies , the Host is prepared to give him a second chance , as " Chaucer " had , but feels this time he has to be more specific as to what is wanted : But as soon as the Monk speaks we have the opportunity to see , firstly , that his reaction does not suggest he is flattered or pleased by the Host 's appraisal of him , and secondly that he sounds quite different from the bold and thrusting " man 's man " that " Chaucer " and the Host would make of him : Note how the Monk 's desire to offer literature that " " sowneth into honestee " " anticipates Chaucer the prosist 's retraction of the tales " " that sownen into synne " " . |