Example sentences of "still [vb base] [pers pn] [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I still owe him the money .
2 He said now he 's telling everybody he said that er I ai n't ever paid him and I still owe him the money .
3 ‘ Carry my respectful greetings and compliments to your kinsmen , Gwilym and Rhys ap Tudor and their brothers , and say I still owe them a shrewd knock for their taking of Conway on Good Friday of last year .
4 Well I was n't there long enough to us an appraisal to he give us , he still give us the targets
5 Although car dealer Cannan has always denied any involvement in Suzy 's disappearance , several detectives still consider him the chief suspect in the baffling case .
6 But I still feel it the same , but not as much as this lot .
7 ‘ And they still assure us the sun will rise again tomorrow .
8 Our airfield was used by the military during World War Two and aircraft from RAF Leeming still pay us a visit occasionally .
9 After sixteen years of fishing for zander I still find it a magical absorbing pastime .
10 ‘ Knowledge , ’ he insisted lightly , ‘ I have to confess that I still find you an unusual and delightful companion — an astonishingly beautiful young woman ; and while I watched you in Wexford market I felt — drawn .
11 Do anything different , you still turn it the same way to lock it down it 's just
12 PW 's overall European results ( up 8% to £837m ) still leave it the smallest of the Big Six in Europe .
13 First , they still call me the enfant terrible of British dance , which I think is a bit easy , really .
14 Some of her former sparring partners still call her a ‘ sell out ’ , but a more open America has welcomed her as one of their own , hailing Monie as one of the world 's strongest rap talents .
15 Only Mercedes-Benz could charge £50,800 for a car that is comprehensively outperformed by a Vauxhall Calibra 2.0i 16v , costing £33,550 less , and still call it a sports car .
16 I do n't know why we still call it the God slot .
17 A sudden dedication to a foreign influence like Hegel or Derrida , brief but intense , is about the only thing there is that can cause the British to lose a sense of humour or a sense of proportion , and during the first London production of Waiting for Godot in 1955 I was reproached by strangers seated around me for laughing , though I still think it a funny play .
  Next page