Example sentences of "'s [verb] [prep] [det] " in BNC.

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31 yeah I would think so nights or days I would of thought nothing 's been really said about what 's happening on that yet , not till the end of towards the end of the
32 You obviously need to know what 's happening on each side of the hedge .
33 Very important for the physics , because what 's happening at that point as far as the physics is concerned , when the acceleration is zero , not , think of a racing car accelerating up to top speed , down the straight and it just ca n't go any faster , it 's got up to a hundred and eighty miles an hour , and it 's
34 Here 's some advance warning of what 's happening at this year 's London Music Show , to be held at Wembley Conference Centre over the weekend of 28th and 29th November .
35 What 's happening about that boy ? ’
36 What 's happening about that ?
37 I mean , what 's happening about these speakers then ?
38 What 's happening in that hospital is nothing short of a crime .
39 Er , but that 's an indication of what 's happening in that area , and indeed , the members erm , I am pleased to say , have taken the right attitude to that , recognised that that 's the case and er addressing that , together with the revenue spend , erm , in a manner which I find is erm , of responsible and approved .
40 Now we 've got to race against time again , this is not just happening in NUPE it 's happened all over and it 's gon na it 's happening in this union before it starts .
41 What 's happening in this ?
42 For those who are n't totally sort of in control of the plot and I probably should include myself as one of them , what 's happening in this scene I want you to act out .
43 What 's happening in this scene ?
44 I 've I 've got your range of one to six here , John , and I 'm not I must stress I 'm not singling you out — I mean your company is fairly typical of what 's happening in this area — but the main difference between one and six is that erm two and six is that number two covers for two hundred part up to two hundred pounds
45 With me in the studio is Stan Bowes , who 's the Head of Marketing for the Thames and Chilterns Tourist Board , and Stan can obviously talk about what 's happening in this immediate area , but first of all I 'll go to the telephone because waiting to talk to us is Michael Medleycote , who 's the Chief Executive of the British Tourist Authority .
46 But I think you could do , see the whole great thing about what 's happening in this electronic change in print is that broadcasting 's advantage has been almost completely wiped out .
47 Right , now if we look on , erm we come to Regional Action Networks , another reason why Amnesty seems not to allocate more than one prisoner and all now is that they have expanded the ways in which we deal with prisoners and the world is more or less been divided up into areas , erm , of smaller regions and groups are asked to choose one or two regions to deal with particularly and we , we have for quite a long time now erm been concerned with Southern Africa and Central America and we get information through on prisoners and what 's happening in those two regions , so John do you have anything else on Africa at all ?
48 So she 's walking past this church and she says if anyone can help me , God can help me .
49 He 's walking like that , it 's like walking round town with a bloody magnet on your back you know he 's there , he 's there .
50 Well it , it shows come on I 'm gon na hit the brake , he 's got a chuffing accelerator pedal , a clutch and a bloody brake pedal there and he 's banging like this and it 's brake 's not working prop it 's , it 's funny , but there was a bloody tent there as well er where the Charlie Sheen is like an indian , and he 's in this tent and this bloke calls to thingybob and he presses this bloody doorbell on it on this tent , it 's funny , I tell you it is funny when you wa er when you actually watch it .
51 Dana must be the Mrs Smith who 's booked into that hotel . ’
52 I mean I think Mr Maxwell 's on the end of a very nasty hook at the moment with these houses and he 's wriggling off that and he 's offered these houses to us to avoid public embarrassment to his company and also to gain co-operation from us and the City Council in other areas .
53 You may well be better off without him instead of living in limbo , not knowing what he 's thinking or why he 's acting in this way .
54 If there 's e if there any party 's operating at all , there 's only one p one thing and that 's centre .
55 By the way , to anybody that 's listening to this , I 'm not really huge but I put on five pounds since I stopped smoking .
56 So if there 's any teacher who 's listening to this programme who would like details of it , by writing in to you , Dudley Ward , at the university ?
57 ‘ What 's written on that buoy ? ’ said Titty .
58 If we knew the connection between the poem and what 's written on those sheets , then cracking the code would be child 's play .
59 Try to keep the fried foods to a minimum , though unlike Western-style frying , it 's done at such a high temperature and so quickly that little fat actually penetrates the food .
60 POSC believes non object-oriented methods of integrating data can take weeks or months — if it 's done at all due to the complexity of what 's involved .
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