Example sentences of "[vb infin] [pron] [adv] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 This would make them respectively the first and fifth most popular tourist arractions in the world , with the ones in between being the three existing Disney theme parks .
2 Yeah she did n't want them exactly the same , she just wanted it , all all the same
3 ‘ People with disabilities are seen as individuals , if one person is unhappy in the job employers do n't brand everyone else the same .
4 Have you any idea at all , can you give me even the slightest clue , as to where her daughter might be ? ’
5 ‘ We 'll do you exactly the same deal on a petrol or diesel Renault , and either way it will be a good one , ’ says sales manager Christopher Ritchie at Renault dealer A.C. Williams in Stamford , Lincolnshire .
6 Similarly , if you had n't been lucky in the market , one lucky bet could send you home the richer by a season 's takings , if you could spot an outsider .
7 ‘ I 'd probably do everything exactly the same .
8 Volvo expects to produce 300 of those , which would give it roughly the same 60 per cent market share it enjoys in the heavy bus category after its takeover of Leyland Bus in 1988 .
9 And do we , do we find some partners or do we do it just the two of us ?
10 Ten teams took part in the first race in 1975 , and they all enjoyed themselves so they thought they would do it again the following year .
11 Presumably one reason why people doing something is they did n't do it enough the first time , or they did n't do it properly , or they did n't do it successfully and therefore they 've got ta keep doing it .
12 He 'd do it all the more would he ?
13 He 'd do it all the more .
14 If he chucks something on the ground he 'll pick it up and give it to me and he 'll do it all the more .
15 A rapid look at The Times newspaper for this Monday in April might give us just the slightest inkling of the minutiae of English life on a most ordinary of ordinary days : Dickens was completing David Copperfield ; Bass 's India Pale Ale could be had for 33s. per 18-gallon cask ; Hampshire Breakfast Bacon would cost you 7½d. by the half side , while Captain Reid 's ‘ Walls End ’ coal was 19s. a ton .
16 When he asked if he could see her again the next day , she would not have dreamed of declining ; they saw each other for about a fortnight , and her enthusiasm for him increased with each meeting , though he said not a word of any interest in the whole two weeks .
17 ‘ And if the old skinflint wo n't give it to me I shall take it just the same .
18 That what the inspector 's been telling us year after year , that we are in serious danger of not coming up to the protection safety standards , is something that we ca n't push into the background any longer and I 'm very glad it 's come to the full council so that the whole council can take it seriously the public protection committee has taken it seriously for a very long time .
19 As someone who has to ask occasionally for a care package for an individual , do I take it then the penultimate paragraph that this is the planning , you know , how you 're going to produce a care package for an individual , this is what you refer to in the planning system , and that you 're getting together with Social Services to get this care package together ?
20 ‘ We 'll have it just the same , Mr Carter . ’
21 Another try this afternoon could make him only the second Englishman to score in all four internationals in a season ; COULD , because Dewi Morris , whose mobile scrum half play has done much to transform England this season season is also on course to match the feat Carston Catcheside of Percy Park achieved in Wakefield 's 1924 side .
22 ‘ How can I ever treat her quite the same again' , he said .
23 ‘ I will pay you twice the hourly fee you make modelling — with a guarantee of four months ’ wages , no matter how quickly the Princess recovers .
24 But erm this might not believe me but I 'm gon na tell you just the same .
25 Yes , yes , yes and I would n't pay my rent because er ooh and I can tell you really the exact date when I er was pregnant because I know I quickened at the when it was first opened and er I was a waitress in the Room I think it was .
26 Of course I co could n't tell you now the different ways , they do what they like now .
27 The poser being , of course , that she could not tell him either the true reason she was here , or even who she really was .
28 ‘ Maybe you 'd better tell it just the same , ’ I said .
29 It must make it all the harder that this reception has availed so little in the result … still this is n't the end of everything .
30 If I , if I do n't get one tonight the only chance is early in the morning .
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