Example sentences of "[adv prt] [prep] [art] [adv] [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Maybe what we should say at the end of the day is erm just is n't talking about that , he 's on about a completely different subject and we really should n't erm we should n't beat over the head for having a bad theory of the self . |
2 | I persisted , rather surprised that somebody who really had done something was so reticent , when there are people , like me for instance , who bleat on about the most tawdry experiences . |
3 | Erm I think it would be nice if the grammar were checked from , we promised to give high priority in responding , surely we can give priority to responding , and as a small point , I was gon na go on about the most important road which of course is Breadfield Street |
4 | The second is how to elicit people 's preferences , and though score sheets , questionnaires and semantic difference scales have been widely used , the search is still on for a more effective method ( Propst and Buyhoff , 1980 ) . |
5 | So the search is on for a more durable , ‘ horizontal ’ resistance to a variety of races of a pest . |
6 | Oh she 's alright , she just had double nappies on for a very long time |
7 | It seemed to go on for a very long time . |
8 | They get typically twice or two and a half times the salaries that our people get and that 's being going on for a very long time . |
9 | ‘ It seemed to go on for an awfully long time . |
10 | It was looked on as a very serious offence . |
11 | She slept unexpectedly soundly , and when she next opened her eyes , daylight was filtering in through the rather grimy window . |
12 | The most famous face of all has slipped in during the seemingly inexorable rise in predicted numbers of Conservative seats . |
13 | Anyone who seems suitable will receive an informal visit and then come down for a more formal interview . ’ |
14 | If an aspiring agent does n't go to college or university , there is no reason why he or she ca n't apply to an agency and come in as a very junior person to work their way up . |
15 | Does the fixity on a particular occasion set in as a purely mental act of knowledge ? |
16 | It also weighs in as the most comfortable waterproof jacket I 've worn . |
17 | But for me it was Couples 's play of the long 15th that marked him down as a most worthy champion . |
18 | The French stood in sharp contrast to all this ; their main energies were directed at expansion in Europe , with the Netherlands marked down as a particularly attractive target , but they were so rich , so dynamic , and so confident in the second half of the seventeenth century that they were quite willing — as asserted in the motto of their great king , Louis XIV , nec pluribus impar — to fight several enemies at once . |
19 | By the time he took to do his business , the bank 's video cameras must have had me down as a fairly suspicious character and I was happy to stop fidgeting when he finally turned away from the cashier and headed for the door . |
20 | As it is , he has gone down as a highly skilled bowler who , because he lacked the flamboyance of some of his colleagues , attracted less attention than many of them ; but who consistently , almost stealthily , got on with the job of collecting three or four wickets in innings after innings after innings . |
21 | In a constantly shifting scene it must go down as the most important symbolic change imaginable . |
22 | That tour has , of course , gone down as the most exciting series of the century . |
23 | The drinkers , drunk as they were , full of glasses of wine , fell back from the man , who , with the rags he wore , had surprisingly clean white underpants — what struck Rab — raised his coat and squatted down as the most natural thing in the world . |
24 | But if you went over the hill , after school time , then you were in for a fairly rough time the other end , you were challenged and all sorts of things . |
25 | These simply involve inviting a handful of neighbours in for a fairly informal plate-on-your-lap spaghetti meal . |
26 | A paint-effect wall makes a beautiful backdrop , whether you try your hand at sponging or go in for a more adventurous colour-wash finish . |
27 | Either that , or he was in for a very sticky evening indeed . |
28 | Holiday parks in which you can camp , or stay in a chalet or caravan are now remarkably good — so much so that if you have n't tried this kind of holiday for a few years you could be in for a very pleasant surprise . |
29 | As environmental health officers become more aware of the implications of poor canopy design , manufacture and maintenance , and their own staffing levels and training improve , many kitchen operators are in for a very rude and expensive awakening ( in most cases the cost of replacing an inefficient system is considerably higher than fitting that same system from the outset ) . |
30 | Dorrainge was in for a very big shock . |