Example sentences of "[vb past] [pers pn] [prep] [adj] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | They got me in 1979 when Eamonn Andrews hosted the show . |
2 | I went to Hemel Hempstead er a school called in Hemel Hempstead that was only from the August till December when I left school and then the erm then the Headmistress , cos we had a Headmistress there cos it was a mixed school , and she recommended me for this here errand boy 's job , his name was . |
3 | Yeah , they we got them for thirty so mind you |
4 | Ann Langford having made her very successful parachute jump which has produced a handsome sum to be shared between Dr. Barnardo 's and the Society wishes to thank all those people who sponsored her in this even . |
5 | Without being aware of it , he punished her for this deeply felt bodily rejection in bed by withdrawing his body out of bed . |
6 | He drew it in 1914 when he was an art student in Munich . |
7 | The hotel manager woke me at 10 a.m. with a telegram from my mother , which had been delayed . |
8 | It could have been the extra garlic I 'd put in the Rogan Josh which woke me at 2.06 a.m. , but it was probably the noise Billy Tuckett made falling through the bathroom skylight and killing himself . |
9 | And of course I er wirelessed the office headquarters in Edinburgh told them about this so they sent a mine sweeper out from Tobermory . |
10 | And erm then of course she told me about this so my mother went to see him . |
11 | I told you about that before . |
12 | But what attracted him above all else to the magazine illustrators was their subject matter . |
13 | He studied her with those incredibly gorgeous blue eyes , filled with charm and love , darkness and intelligence , sex appeal and strength . |
14 | She continued : " We failed you in 1938 when a disastrous policy of appeasement allowed Hitler to extinguish your independence . |
15 | He telephoned me at three o'clock in the morning , and asked me to confirm it . |
16 | I paid you till four o'clock , I thought oh no er and he says do you want one ? |
17 | For the ‘ Banality ’ show , Koons created a startling series of ads that showed him in four flagrantly artificial settings . |
18 | Deaf people did not escape their share of war-time tragedy and hardship , but the war benefited them in one very important respect . |
19 | Then he smiled , and thanked her in that tearingly familiar voice , and suddenly she could hardly bear to think that she had lost him . |
20 | And then he gave order that all the windows of the towers which looked in upon the town should be closed up , that the Christians might not see what the Moors did in their houses ; and the Moors thanked him for this greatly . |
21 | Now er Richard rang me at five o'clock yesterday . |
22 | Last night we had a phone call , oh it frightened me at first actually , I answered the phone |
23 | Used in conjunction with the other clues given in the text and the illustrations , this information soon guided me to some very productive search areas . |
24 | And then he pulled her in close again and ravaged her neck so that Robyn shrieked aloud and knew all the while that she was falling deeper and deeper … |
25 | But now we want them all shared out so instead of saying one remainder two we writ it like this now . |
26 | and I tried all weekend trying to get only there from five to seven , and I got him after five o'clock on Tuesday |
27 | We a we already asked him about that actually . |
28 | That was Aisa , too , I might say , who persuaded me into that quite strange position for an old ham actor to be in , but erm |
29 | Whatever it was , the moment I saw the Parsons I knew them for British as surely as though they 'd had the word stamped on their hides like bacon . |
30 | His round was made around a run of five 3s from the second to the sixth holes — that brought him to two under for the championship . |