Example sentences of "[vb -s] [pers pn] [adv prt] [art] [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | ‘ Well , he rubs me up the wrong way . |
2 | At least , this human being loyally follows me around the place , keeps tabs on me and rings me up the whole time . |
3 | So it covers it up a little bit , but it looks like he 's gone bald . |
4 | Rainbow spins it round a few times , and whistles . |
5 | Perry leads us up the unlit stairwell , the smell of urine sharp in our nostrils . |
6 | Erm , it 's a city , this takes me back a few months , since the Southern Ryedale local plan enquiry , the character , special character of a city , is derives from a number of elements , there 's the green wedges which centre on the strays which penetrate into the heart of the built up area , there is the encircling belt of open countryside which links those areas together , there are the numerous settlements within the greenbelt and their relationship to one another , and to the city of York . |
7 | He kidnaps her in the hope that she will accept and return his affections and when he ties her up the sexual and emotional metaphors of the title abound . |
8 | It 's a great way for producing long banners or waste paper but And if you wan na actually reverse this process alt M takes it back the other way . |
9 | The other , on the face of it , gives less cause for revelling , since it takes us back a mere 70 years and is effectively an anniversary of an anniversary . |
10 | Only if one turns it round a complete revolution ( 360 degrees ) does the particle look the same . |
11 | Doc Reid dishes me out a few vitamin pills when I 'm feeling lousy . ’ |
12 | Once seen , it gives us back a legitimate access to a great wealth of traditional human experience on the matter , which must of course be critically used , but which certainly does not leave us utterly puzzled , as we might be in starting to observe a strange species . |
13 | Unless you 've been calling my bluff since day one , you should be able to see off any mere mortal who rubs us up the wrong way . ’ |