Example sentences of "and [verb] [pers pn] [vb infin] [conj] " in BNC.
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1 | And they should come down cleaning and helping you like and making you something to eat like . |
2 | I just hope that he believes what he sees , that you do n't become too obvious and make him realize that he 's being set up . ’ |
3 | He must persuade the Collector of his error and make him realize that his veneration for this Vanity Fair of materialism was misplaced . |
4 | What we need to do is get our members and make them feel that they 're part of Europe , not dispossessed by it , at this moment in the time there 's not a lot for them in consideration of Europe . |
5 | I will be able to bring what is going on here in science back to the children in the classroom , and make them realise that it is not so far away from what they are learning about . |
6 | He would write a book which would cause a sufficient furore to upset both his parents thoroughly and make them realize that he was a person to be reckoned with . |
7 | falling down his trousers and make me laugh and shout , I 'll always feel so happy when the comes about ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , ha , the funny circus clown |
8 | What transpires around 30 March when the Sun in Aries makes a disagreeable aspect to the revolutionary and unpredictable planet Uranus will , it seems , cut you to the quick , and make you realise that there are certain individuals who will never be on your wavelength . |
9 | It 's unfortunate that such things serve to bring you to your senses and make you realise that of course it 's dangerous . |
10 | And the keynote speaker at the Republican Convention , Thomas Kean , Governor of New Jersey , apparently felt it necessary to assert that ‘ we will search out bigotry and racism — we will drag it into the sunshine of understanding and make it wither and die ’ . |
11 | I suppose you thought you 'd paint Paula in a bad light and make it seem as though she could n't be bothered to go . |
12 | But if you 're really stuck and you 've got a third question that you ca n't come up with I mean y'know sort of blur it , fudge it and make it look like there 's a sort of metamorphic answer there and we can sort of say well that 's sort of twenty percent or something and then that counts and it may carry you over . |
13 | Well , perhaps I wo n't light the fire until half past eleven or something to try and make it go that bit further . |
14 | It had been far easier to keep it tidy , she thought , in the days when she wore it pinned up ; the style she had taken to suited her better and made her look and feel years younger than she was but it was a terrible nuisance . |
15 | And there were times now , even amidst the hubbub of men , when the numbness reared its head again and made him think that eventually it would take over and he 'd descend into silence , cold unthinking silence . |
16 | According to Eadmer , it was a small incident which opened Anselm 's eyes to the true state of affairs , and made him realize that the king would in no circumstances allow him to take any action beyond the routine of his episcopal duties . |
17 | This experience , acquired in an age when the chemist was regarded as an expert only in a special field , turned Davis into a generalist and made him realize that the enormous variety of industrial chemical processes could be reduced to a relatively small number of operations , and that the study of these in the abstract would enable general principles to be discovered which could be applied to any process operation — the keystone of chemical engineering . |
18 | ‘ God it was awful , ’ he said , and made them laugh and accept what he said , and Barnett never asked for the certificate this time . |
19 | The idea of two particles so near in mass was troubling for some people and made them wonder if some misinterpretations had occurred ; in particular Patrick Blackett , another Nobel Laureate , raised a question as to whether there might be other explanations of the pion decay . |
20 | But the main function of the British and Russian ministers was to observe and counter each other 's activities ; it was the rivalries of these two great imperial powers which kept alive their interest in Persia and made them establish and maintain relations with it . |
21 | It pinned us down and made us feel that we could n't not go back without feeling terribly guilty . |
22 | ‘ You 're thinking that the aunt killed him and made it look as though he 'd done it himself . ’ |
23 | So he turned round the second he did , and made it look as though he was waiting for the woman he 'd just tried to kill — when they were walking along together … |
24 | And d' you think that anyone will remember us next March ? |
25 | and let him sit and listen to me |
26 | She was n't going to do it again , and let him think that she could still be affected by anything he said , or by the way he looked at her . |
27 | ‘ And I am still your maid , ’ McAllister had said gaily to him , but , of course , she was now less and less of a maid and more a member of the family , working side by side with Matey in cheerful equality , living and playing with them in the evening , and when Dr Neil spoke of the wedding day again she said that she must write to her uncle at least , before anything could be arranged , and let him think that she had done so . |
28 | And let him lose as well the testicles which excited his hot lust . |
29 | She would tell Robert that and let him know that she did n't need to be treated as though she were completely helpless . |
30 | Owen drew on him , and let him attack as he would , approving the pointless but touching valour with which he came on . |