Example sentences of "[vb infin] [noun prp] [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ With its comprehensive specification and competitive pricing , Safrane will pitch Renault at the head of the volume executive sector for the first time . ’ |
2 | If there 's clothes that what am I gon na , if there 's clothes they do n't want Jean into the bin ! |
3 | She talked freely , did n't treat Lucy like a child , and told her stories of old times in long-forgotten venues . |
4 | ‘ By closing off Hammond Drive it would make Lakeside into a cul-de-sac and would be safe for children . ’ |
5 | Feeling dejected , she tried to push the questions from her mind , and as soon as the register formalities had been completed she left the office and went to see if she could assist Matt with the loading of the barbecue trailer . |
6 | Others may buy UnixWare with the intention of adding or upgrading to a NetWare network in the future . |
7 | Moore warned just how physical the first meeting between the teams since 1984 could become , adding to fears that Botha could bury England with an avalanche of carelessly conceded penalties . |
8 | This research will provide that basis by monitoring the effectiveness of a City Council scheme in Southampton to re-light and install CCTV in a subway system near the City Centre . |
9 | But in addition the British government went along with the er demand by the French government that they should recognise Strasbourg as a meeting place for the European parliament in perpetuity . |
10 | It is precisely because he knew who God was that he knew he could trust God in the dark . |
11 | My ‘ Jottings ’ will describe Italy as a place where the drama in the streets is never ending . |
12 | Billy Baloo used to erm know Tommy on the wall |
13 | He would cover Scotland in a sea of flames , and teach those traitors a lesson they would never forget . |
14 | Perhaps I could rule Scotland without a man , but I could not have a child without one . |
15 | We believe that now he will prepare Ireland for the rebirth of the monster-god Crom Croich . ’ |
16 | We must bring Colin to the garden as soon as we can . ’ |
17 | The problem is if we can ever trap Hauser in a situation that 's illegal we 'll need every witness we can get . |
18 | ‘ Someone should send Katrina on a cookery course . |
19 | Salinas dismissed fears that a new relationship with the USA would isolate Mexico from the rest of Latin America . |
20 | I can bring Tammuz to the comm unit if you like . |
21 | Bloomfield said : ‘ If 30 million people can watch England in the World Cup surely some of those would be interested in the football results . ’ |
22 | Sarah let Roy carry Benny into the house , and as she looked at Janine comforting her only daughter , the ice in her heart melted . |
23 | ’ I think you should bring Mavis on a bit , ’ I said . |
24 | Lij Yasu 's restoration would at the least constitute a considerable propaganda success for Turkey ; it might even bring Abyssinia into the war on the side of our enemies , at a time when we were fighting the Germans in East Africa , the Turks in Sinai , Mesopotamia and the Aden Protectorate , and the Dervishes in Somaliland . |
25 | Innocent did not associate Philip with the murder , but relentlessly sought the true murderers who were finally brought to justice in Rome in April 1203 and sent to the Holy Land . |
26 | This is a great club , the only one that can beat Liverpool for the enthusiasm of its supporters ’ , he enthused . |
27 | In 1917 he could refer Garvin to a speech made in 1905 where he stated his ideal for the British Empire : ‘ we think of a group of states , all independent in their own local concerns , but all united for the defence of their common interests and the defence of a common civilisation , united not in an alliance — for alliances can be made and unmade — but in a permanent organic union' . |
28 | But Hsu was so anxious that " West Town " should typify China as a whole that the Min Chia peculiarities of the local culture are hardly ever mentioned . |
29 | He supposed they would lock Ho in the boot or hide him somewhere while his father was fetched . |
30 | This last interpretation might confirm Astrophil as a lover of truth through his acknowledgement that a representation of love in verse is artificial , that he is feigning . |