Example sentences of "[vb infin] [adv] [art] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.
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31 | So he sto , do you know where the two tills are downstairs do you ? |
32 | Well now we do n't Do you know where the other things are ? |
33 | Do n't know where to go though do n't know where the best places are do n't know where they are . |
34 | And this is why your first attempt to conduct a great work will often end up as a disaster , because you do n't know where the real points of stress are , you do n't know how the piece is distributed . |
35 | Er I , does anybody know where the past papers are kept ? |
36 | And he did n't know where the Em , he did n't know where the Emerald Isles was last week , he had to ask . |
37 | Welcoming Lenin 's New Economic Policy , he expressed the hope that the development of Anglo-Soviet trade would persuade Russia to ‘ throw away the last shreds of Bolshevism and Communism by which it is at present fettered . ’ |
38 | Every shift , they face people who have lost lovers , lost jobs or lost families through AIDS or ( more often ) the fear of AIDS ; every shift they have to help people think through the new consequences of future sex or face the possible results of past ignorance . |
39 | It 's time we took a stronger line with wild-eyed enthusiasts who do n't think through the full consequences of their soft-hearted feelings . |
40 | This limits the degree of possible grazing or nibbling and explains why deer and cattle , for example , will eat just a few mouthfuls from each tree before moving on . |
41 | They are ruminants and have special structures in their stomachs ( the rumen ) , containing special micro-organisms which can break down the hard parts of the plants . |
42 | Barclays , National Westminster and Royal Bank of Scotland will bring in the new cheques ‘ at some point ’ . |
43 | I 'd return home and do all the usual things that keep your sense of yourself — eat , play around with children , do my washing , telephone my nearest and dearest , talk late into the night with my hosts , have fantasies , pleasure myself . |
44 | The coronation seemed to last for hours , but I managed to say and do all the right things . |
45 | The emergence of such standards , and the ability to re-use programs written in conventional languages , should bring down the last barriers to wide acceptance of parallel computing . |
46 | She could feel only a few twigs . |
47 | They should , for that matter , hand out a runners-up trophy too a replica of Wembley would do so the beaten finalists would have more than forced smiles to parade on homecoming day . |
48 | On Sept. 16 Rubia had explained the move to establish a new party " as a strategy that could help bring together the two factions of [ FORD ] " . |
49 | The Home Secretary , Sir Samuel Hoare , noted that any influx of refugees from the continent might bring together the political extremes — the fascists who had been attacking the Jews for three years and the communists and other left-wing elements who might argue that Jewish refugees were taking away Gentile employment . |
50 | The Advanced Research Workshop will bring together the leading researchers in the field of science management to determine our present understanding of academic-industry relations and to establish an agenda for future research . |
51 | ‘ If I went to manage a team on the continent I would still do exactly the same things I did at QPR . |
52 | I 'll do just a few observations on the match . |
53 | Let me give just a few facts and figures . |
54 | That is handy if you could bring just the six pounds . |
55 | Thus , would give exactly the same results as the previous example . |
56 | Morton had met many like him ; the thrusting entrepreneurs who could shoulder aside the rigid structures of Victorian society , and almost be accepted … |
57 | Despite this , Potidaia paid tribute to Athens , who in 433/2 demanded that Potidaia should send home the Corinthian magistrates and pull down part of her walls . |
58 | Politicians are n't going to stick their necks out to help break up the various logjams unless we 're shouting and yelling at them from the bank — for the most part to encourage them , but also to warn them of dire consequences to come if they get out of the hot water before the job is done . |
59 | That 'll warm up the old bones . ’ |
60 | and we will not give up the good things in life for Greenpeace and for a clean environment |