Example sentences of "[vb pp] [pers pn] [adv] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 So I 've said I 've listed them well the important points for me were the Aldershot method the arousal curve and the need for audience content .
2 Marlin had given them both a detailed description of the assailant , and instructions to let nobody up to the second floor without Ms Odell 's permission , and even then they were to accompany the visitor to the apartment door , and escort them out if his guest chose not to see them .
3 Cardiff manager John Lawless moved heaven and earth to get the Coopers back to South Wales this summer and is believed to have given them both an unprecedented £10,000 signing on fee and a £30,000 salary .
4 Her ‘ usual stuff ’ had built them both a fabulous reputation and in any case he was n't too sure how she would take such a phrase .
5 ‘ You would have seen them together a fair bit and it 's just so sad this should happen while they were on holiday . ’
6 It was there , in lulls in the conversation , that he became a crossword addict and began to develop the concern for correct English , the wide vocabulary , the delight in the niceties of syntax , that have made him both a witty and a hard task master for generations of Bristol students .
7 And if Derry succeed , he will murmur a silent but heartfelt ‘ thank you ’ to Kevin Heffernan , the man who gave him a new outlook and sense of purpose in the sport which has made him both a local and national hero .
8 So those but Fantasia passes are very similar , I just turned mine turned mine round she saw it and went she showed me a blank yellow so I did n't thought it perhaps a different pass but it was n't just turned it round on her .
9 You 've had it quite a long time have n't you ?
10 Oh Gabriel , Gabriel , you 've got it completely the wrong way rou … ’
11 The blame for syphilis was invariably ascribed to foreigners , with the result that the English called it the French disease , the French called it the Italian disease , the Italians , unable to make up their minds , called it both the French disease and the Spanish disease , while the Spanish called it the disease of Hispaniola ( Haiti ) .
12 ‘ Have n't you found me rather a good audience ? ’
13 It had taken them only a short time to realise they were from opposite sides in the Therapeutic Wars , but it had caused little friction .
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