Example sentences of "do [noun] " in BNC.

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1 At the 1993 Venice Biennale , the Council had unanimously intended to award Giulio Argan a Leon d' Oro prize ; as Curator of this next Biennale , I would like to put this fact on record .
2 He instigated a meaningless rumble with the maitre d' s .
3 sugar and erm Tia er not Tia Maria , creme d' banana or something like that , yeah and erm plenty of ice cubes
4 Other tears flow more from the solar plexus — my tear fountain — they are my Strauss tears , or more recently Berlioz 's Nuits d' Ete , certain pieces by Chopin , Elgar Cello concerto , Brahms violin concerto , the slow movement in Schubert 's string quartet , some of Bach 's choral music … the list goes on .
5 D' India does so in ‘ Torna il sereno Zefiro ’ from his fifth book of Musiche ( 1623 ) ; and Berti distinguishes between recitative and arioso in ‘ Occhi miei tristi ’ from his Cantade et Arie ( 1624 ) , and between recitative and aria in ‘ Da grave incendio ’ in his second set ( 1627 ) .
6 She wrote in it , ‘ If this Glass Doth Fall
7 But there are companies who advertise in Yellow Pages that they will do investigations on behalf of employers of future employees .
8 But I would n't wan na do primary or junior , just
9 I could do park parade tha , a girl was , er er anywa , I went in the factory and one of the girls says they were saying about a dance , says ooh I quite a few you ought to see him dance the park parade !
10 It 's best to do these on the track , but if one is not available , you can do repeats of two and a half to three and a half minutes on the road .
11 Well you 've had an E C G and we 've done chest X-rays and erm the E the electrical tracing of your heart did n't really show an awful lot but So er Anyway let's see what we 've got today .
12 Outside hospital , these patients have done chest physiotherapy close to one another and have shared nebulising facilities .
13 er lightly done kippers on one side .
14 I 'm just gon na do strips already just oh I need some scissors then .
15 I 've done chambermaiding , I 've done housekeeping , there ai n't many other things you can do and then she says and what about cooking ?
16 There was a big surge of local optimism when Martin Crowe won what appeared to be a very important toss — not that winning it in the first Test had done NZ much good .
17 Well done mum , .
18 Well done mum for reading that out wrongly to me .
19 So erm we as , we as I say are very concerned about er that ca n't have done Jan any good , that 's
20 Perhaps there are so many new routes being done West Cumbria that the writers can not keep up ; or is it that other areas are more important to the committee ?
21 I sa , I was sat there and and then we was in maths , like the lesson before and I was going Zena , I do n't wan na do P E !
22 Every time I wonder about going to join George and to use my TEFL qualification , I wonder how I would REALLY do teaching English to people , though I guess I have had quite a lot of ad hoc and ungrammatical ( ! ) experience with the various language students who have stayed here .
23 I do n't do cooking .
24 All such grants of authority may be expressed in the following manner : if X exists the tribunal may or shall do Y. X may consist of a number of different elements , factual , legal and discretionary .
25 On the one hand , in a certain sense , all the elements which comprise X condition the tribunal 's power to decide upon Y. The statute says , explicitly or implicitly , if X you may or shall do Y. On the other hand , to accept that the reviewing courts should be the ultimate arbiters of the meaning of all the elements comprising the X factor would cause review to become very like appeal .
26 It is very common for a statute to say if X 1 , X 2 , X 3 exist the tribunal may or shall do Y. X 2 and X 3 would , like X 1 , be shorthand descriptions presuming the existence of elements within the bracket .
27 The enabling statute always , explicitly or implicitly , states , if X 1 , X 2 , X 3 exist you may or shall do Y. Yet , if X 1 , X 2 , and X 3 , and all the elements constituting them , were always held to be jurisdictional in a legal sense , the dividing line between review and appeal would be emasculated : the tribunal would have power to give only the right answer , this meaning the answer which accords with the view of the reviewing court .
28 All statutes giving power in effect say if X exists , you may or shall do Y. The answer as to who is to determine X ( and the factors constituting X ) is dependent upon which theory of jurisdiction is accepted .
29 At the inception of the previous chapter it was said that all grants of power to public bodies could be broken down into two parts : if X exists , you may or shall do Y.
30 He can do addition and he can do take-aways , and he 's pretty , he 's not so bad with them but I think what it is , is basically they 're cramming them now .
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