Example sentences of "always [verb] [verb] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Such rules are not always calculated to improve the truth value of the police case and a few are at odds with the fact-finding object of police investigation .
2 Commenting on the decision chief executive Dr Brian Eyre said , ‘ We have always regarded breaking the link as essential to our commercial success whether or not we are privatised .
3 People have always travelled to see the world and to find out how other people live .
4 I 've always enjoyed flying the Jaguar , it 's a lovely plane to fly , espoecially if it 's flying light
5 He always wants to rush the process .
6 Poor old Jim always has to make the decision because he is in command , okay ?
7 Someone always has to start the clapping and when she did a few others followed .
8 ‘ I was on the other end of the question for most of my life as a British Telecom customer manager , and I always tried to see the view of the underdog , because there is just a chance he might be right , ’ he said .
9 But as soon as we hit with something that was n't what we were about , we always tried to get the band back to what we thought it should be — three guitars and drums played loud by four New York bums .
10 I always tried to understand the man and I never had any problems with him .
11 Yet at least England can now hope in the future for better things from the bat of Lewis , who has always looked to have the ability to be a genuine all-rounder at Test level but until this match had scored just 483 runs from 15 Tests at an average of 24 .
12 Goldmann specifically rejected a Durkheimian approach to sociology , recognizing that the facts are always approached using the researcher 's ‘ categories and implicit and unconscious preconceptions ’ ( Goldmann 1969 : 41 ) .
13 Ensuring that you 'll always enjoy seeing the car as much as you enjoy driving it .
14 The holiday began tomorrow — in fact it had as good as started already , since Bill was staying at home — and holidays always seemed to point the problem more sharply .
15 Even with University College Cork — whom he captained to a Munster League title in 1985 — and with Dolphin , the man over in Cork Constitution always seemed to hold the edge .
16 Nevertheless , the Trust is always looking to increase the register as the larger the number of donors , the better the chance of a successful match and transplant operation .
17 ‘ I now feel I defend much better and instead of always looking to beat the full-back I am happy to get half a yard on him and cross the ball as quickly as possible . ’
18 When on the pavement always walk facing the traffic and well out from any buildings .
19 He pressed into Hoc 's hand the little ball of cold rice wrapped in a palm leaf that each of them always saved front the night before to give them strength to start the new day .
20 The teaching body in the university , so far as it has not joined ‘ The Thing ’ , has always preferred to accept the philosophy of ‘ The Thing ’ rather than reassert what it well knew was the requisite of any academic society .
21 Ingleborough 's steep sides always manage to give the impression that the top of the hill has been sliced off ; when it 's cloaked in a mist cap , you can almost imagine a cone-shaped summit .
22 Well you should never worry you always manage to find the sunshine somewhere do n't you ?
23 Whenever articles are written or programmes broadcast about consumer rights , they always seem to put the trader into the ‘ bad boy ’ box .
24 THE wit and wisdom of Oscar Wilde always seem to stand the test of time .
25 ‘ I always enjoy playing the world 's top four players because there 's less pressure on me , ’ said Wattana , who now meets either world champion Stephen Hendry or Alan McManus .
26 Generally speaking , there is evidence that the church has always tended to support the hegemony of the state qua state .
27 But generally speaking the ideal has always tended to accentuate the gap between the clerical world view and the lay world view within catholicism .
28 Writing in the influential Police Review magazine , Mr Roach , head of policing for north-west London and a member of the Association of Chief Police Officers , said that , since the time of Sir Robert Peel , the police had always had to reassure the public that their powers and privileges would not be misused .
29 With the best will in the world , the library is not always going to have the book on its shelves that the student is after ; and nor are members of staff always going to be available to answer students ' enquiries .
30 And at the beginning and the end of your life you 've always got to have the help of somebody alongside you — all the time .
  Next page