Example sentences of "really [verb] [vb infin] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Compared with the £20 prices now becoming typical for the likes of popular Grandes Marques , such as Veuve Clicquot , these wines really do represent remarkable value . |
2 | Although visibility remains a problem I really do think this repositioning is an important step forward . |
3 | I really do like that hat ! |
4 | I really do appreciate all kindness you have given to me , Jean . |
5 | ‘ You really do need some sleep , do n't you ? ’ |
6 | Its advanced design ensures you really do enjoy improved picture performance . |
7 | I really do see this age as a time to widen horizons . |
8 | I really do believe sexual possessiveness is something we should struggle against , no matter how difficult we find it . |
9 | He really did love this land . |
10 | The sharpest clash occurred in the village of Bezdna in the eastern province of Kazan " , where a certain Anton Petrov began claiming that the statutes really did grant wholesale freedom . |
11 | " I 've been proving to Graham I really did have some wine and it smashed . " |
12 | The ‘ false dawn of courtesy ’ was over and the pupils really did accept each other . |
13 | The usual adult ticket price is £13 and children 's £9.99 so the Sainsbury 's offer really does represent good value . |
14 | The shape of the group really does give some impression of an arrow ! |
15 | If the theory which states that all errors of law are jurisdictional really does gain general acceptance then the distinction between law and fact will be vital . |
16 | The five-way selector deals out all the sounds you would expect to find and the tone control really does add more sparkle , rather than ( as is so often the case ) rendering everything tinny and harsh . |
17 | In view of the interviewer 's role in the discourse , it is not clear how far or how reliably such an extended interview really does resemble spontaneous conversation ; but Labov 's schema is likely to be less demanding of the fieldworker , more economical of time and resources , and so not subject to the same range of disadvantages as the participant observation methods of the Belfast community studies . |