Example sentences of "[vb pp] [prep] [pron] [prep] [det] " in BNC.
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31 | Looked at me like that . |
32 | She had laughed , looked at him with some of her usual mischief on her face , erasing for a moment the memory of what had so recently passed . |
33 | No well I would n't have looked at them from that , from the point of view of |
34 | When you have worked through the sensations , looked at them from all angles and asked yourself why they have entered your life and what is to be gained from them , it is important to be able to let them go . |
35 | I 've looked at it on both sides , from different angles and colour is something to do with it . |
36 | He had not really looked at it like that before . |
37 | ‘ I had n't looked at it like that . |
38 | Oh yeah , I 've never looked at it like that before , yeah , ah , ah |
39 | Did n't your detective johnnie come across something like that in one of your books ? ’ |
40 | I do n't know whether you 've come across her at all . |
41 | ‘ I 've never come across anything like this before . |
42 | Very few are so unmusical as to have no music at all within them , and all of us are surrounded by it for much of the time . |
43 | … the novel is destined to be perceived from within itself — the same as the real world … to enjoy a novel we must feel surrounded by it on all sides … |
44 | André was far too exuberant to be shattered by something like that , but it had given her ego a kick . |
45 | But Prince Charles did not appear attracted by anyone from that world . |
46 | He now feels that he will never be liked or respected by anyone in this school again . |
47 | It is a privilege enjoyed by everyone in this country but because the library profession has a responsibility for some considerable part of the provision of and access to literature and information , there is a heightened obligation for the library profession in the UK to resist censorship with a much greater collective and individual will than it has tended to show in the past . |
48 | These include the effect on exports from the UK , and regional unemployment , as well as a ‘ catch-all ’ gateway ( b ) : restrictions may be permitted which would confer on the public as purchasers , consumers or users of any goods or services , other specific and substantial benefits or advantages enjoyed or likely to be enjoyed by them as such . |
49 | BM says that behaviour is influenced by two powerful forces , both of which could be modified by you in some situations . |
50 | But I do think the specific point you make as to whether there 's any prospect of the National Commission for Racial Equality putting any money towards the development worker that 's wished , ought to be addressed by somebody at some point in the context of preparing the next report . |
51 | To sum up , in positing an item as an ontological existent we are at the same time by implication positing this item as a potential subject of a non-arbitrary subset of predicates from among an indefinite number of meaningful predicates , and hence as completely determinate with regard to possible descriptions that may be given of it at any given time . |
52 | ‘ You have not heard of me from any other person ? ’ |
53 | He had heard of me from some of his colleagues and asked to see me to discuss the Labour Party 's decision in relation to the litigation it had brought , with my guidance , against the Manchester Guardian as a result of the leaks from the National Executive . |
54 | ‘ Ziggy Stardust ’ had just been released in England and David was doing well with it , or so I 'm told , but no-one had heard of him at all in America , so Tony DeFries gave us each a box of 25 albums to just give to whoever we thought was cool , which actually turned out to be a pretty good idea . |
55 | When we at last learned his name , we had not heard of him at all . |
56 | Never heard of him after that did you I mean ? |
57 | No more is heard of him after this , although Kympton was acting as agent for the commissioners of the sick and wounded at Plymouth in 1703 . |
58 | You have n't heard of anything like that at all have you ? |
59 | A spokesman for The Magistrates Association said : ‘ I have never heard of anything like this happening before . ’ |
60 | ‘ But I 've never heard of anything like this before . ’ |