Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] [pers pn] come [adv prt] to " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Why did n't you come down to supper ? ’ |
2 | ‘ Why do n't you come round to my flat next week , and I 'll cook you a meal . ’ |
3 | Better still , why do n't you come along to a party we 're throwing tomorrow evening ? |
4 | ‘ Why do n't you come down to our office and have a look ? ’ |
5 | ‘ No. ’ 'Then why do n't you come down to the marina at five tomorrow morning . |
6 | But look , in any case , why do n't you come back to town with me today , while we 've still got Mrs Bennett and Miss Maynard . |
7 | does n't it come back to the issue of wh who they trustees are and who 's interest , given that trustees are expected to be independent , in the end , who 's interests do the trustees represent , because I 've had experience of working with a pension fund that was in massive surplus and the actualar actuaries refused to agree their final report until that surplus was dealt with , so that the trade unions and the employer through the trustees had to negotiate a way of spending that surplus and er given the pressures of the actuaries to say we were not allowed th the funds to continue unless you deal with this surplus , then it comes back to the issue of how the Board of Trustees is made up and if we accept that there is a degree of representation on that Board , then just exactly how that representation is divided . |