Example sentences of "[Wh adv] [pers pn] [vb -s] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He runs a scrap yard there and erm whenever he gets decent cars in like , he flogs them on .
2 On Friday , Paula , whose writing emphasises the sound of language , demonstrated how she uses electronic technology to project and enhance her voice during the performance of her work .
3 Since she has been grown-up she has told me how she remembers those Saturday mornings and how she loved them .
4 He also points out , in passing , that various questions of the sort which have cropped up in earlier chapters of this book , such as whether matter can think , and how it produces mental sensations , ‘ are entirely banished from philosophy ’ by the adoption of immaterialism .
5 1.2 It is tempting at this point to plunge straight into an account of the adjectival system and how it produces such results as those above ; and in fact we should state clearly at this point that readers who prefer to build up the picture piece by piece , assessing the validity of the connexion between data and theory by starting from the evidential end , may pass immediately to Chapter 2 without any disadvantage .
6 After some preparatory work in Napier , they will learn at first hand about how organisations work , relating theory to the aims of their particular community partner organisation and how it achieves those aims .
7 Nor does he specify what kind of effects might be achieved by a reformulation or explain how it achieves those effects .
8 Now the basis for the pathogenesis is not well enough established for us to expect you to understand the details of how it achieves these processes , but one thing which is remarkably clear is that the organism is a capsule producing organism and that once it gets into the er cerebral spinal fluid that predominately is an acute inflammatory .
9 What we do not know is how it squares those beliefs with its later beliefs in market forces , the EC and industrial efficiency .
10 ‘ Awful how it takes some people . ’
11 ‘ I could see what he was thinking , so I started talking about love , how it means different things to different people , and that 's when he said it . ’
12 In this issue , Cathy McCormack shares with us her personal perspectives on this process and how it infiltrates many levels .
13 It may well take only a quarter of an hour to train a worker in the future but industry is also going to have to change how it treats that worker .
14 how it serves each man in his allotment ,
15 Is n't that how it affects some women ? ’
16 To find out how it affects Scottish farmers one need go no further than my constituency .
17 It sums up how it carries large loads .
18 It is time the Labour Party explained how it sees non-sectarian politics developing in Northern Ireland .
19 It 's self evident Mr Deputy Speaker that this government is utterly unconcerned to carry out an obligation to which is bound by a treaty , freely entered into and the minister must answer the question of how he squares this inactivity with regulation nine three which obliges registration officers to take reasonable steps to obtain information about who should be eligible to appear on the electoral role .
20 He has driven himself a long way in a short time ( abandoning , for example , the naïve ) ; he will drive on , and we shall have to see how he uses this hardness , emphasis , energy and comprehensiveness , how much more power he has of development . ’
21 There can be a useful discussion between the project leader and an ergonomist where the former is invited to clarify how he sees these intercommunication problems being dealt with including such criteria as what is reported to him , what to the meeting of sub-heads and what occurs directly between sub-teams .
22 I wonder how he reconciles this view with the ringing commitment by the Labour leader , John Smith , on the first day of the conference to the establishment of a Scottish parliament , capable of returning Scotland 's possibly privatised water supplies to public ownership within the first year of the next Labour government .
23 No one knows that p unless he can say how he knows that p .
24 ‘ Maybe you should talk ter Albert Buller when 'e calls next time , ’ he suggested .
25 ‘ She 's already doing a novena for me because of the Good Sex Guide she 'll be praying forever when she sees this show . ’
26 But why go half-way round the world to find Lady Happiness when She works next door to you ?
27 So that 's where she gets those handbags
28 Each Brownie then takes it in turn to pin their card on the map where she thinks that country is .
29 Since moving to Knaresborough a year ago , Mrs Goode has become involved with the local playgroup where she does three sessions a week .
30 She lives in Gloucestershire , where she has 15 acres of land , and she keeps a small flat just by Regent 's Park .
  Next page