Example sentences of "[vb base] [prep] [art] bad [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | It is always a big event and probably just what we want after a bad defeat . ’ |
2 | The wind takes him away like a curtain snatch on a bad act . |
3 | You sound like a bad play ! ’ |
4 | IN a week when Mark McNulty has had to pull out of the Jersey European Airways Open with a bad back , Sam Torrance , the holder , has come to La Moye with his hands covered in blisters . |
5 | People do n't know anything about the things that they 're not talking about , you 've had no experience of it , you do n't know , you know of the bad hairpieces and wigs |
6 | Certainly , for your first few flights , your left hand should be close to the release knob , so that you can release immediately if you get into a bad swing or a wing-tip goes onto the ground . |
7 | Instead of planning to have a stable foothold at each step , you recover from a bad step with the next one you take . |
8 | By the way , before you get to the bad part , was I right about your name ? ’ |
9 | In relation to the sentence stem ‘ A girl and her mother … ’ , girls often produce responses like ‘ often go through a bad patch for a year but once they learn to understand each other , become the best of friends ’ or ‘ can help each other with their problems ’ . |
10 | We all go through the bad times so if these Glentoran supporters or any other supporters of other clubs would get behind their team , instead of giving continual stick , perhaps fortunes on the park might change . |
11 | Think of the bad example you are to anyone on the list for surgery . |
12 | ‘ It 's because we live on a bad star , is n't it , Tess ? ’ he said through his tears . |
13 | All the Pain that Money Can Buy : the Life of Christina Onassis by William Wright ( Gollancz , £5.99 ) — The author 's explanation of why people devour books about the rich is appropriately cynical : ‘ We examine their bounteous lives on the modest condition that they suffer and come to a bad end . ’ |
14 | ‘ Come to a bad end , ’ said Mrs Yaxlee with relish . |
15 | ‘ Have I come at a bad time ? ’ |
16 | ‘ Have I come at a bad moment ? ’ she asked . |
17 | He had moved out to escape distraction and improve on the bad lighting , but more than anything he wanted space , so that he could draw from a model occasionally . |