You are on page 1of 3

--CORPUS--

|But Schleicher "could" argue that in comparison with other Indo-European


languages,..|
(In search of the Indo-Europeans : language, archaeology, and myth)

|The word Eskimo, for example, was "picked up" by early explorers from the
Algonkian
Indians.|
(The kinds of mankind; an introduction to race and racism)

|So, you know? What "else could have" happened to the tooth? Who knows?|
|sorry, I said, disoriented and at a loss, and really, what "else could" I say?
The words around death are never quite right and never quite|
(COCA, !what else could!)

|Cat "rolling off" the bed|


|Man Miraculously Survives "Falling Off" Water Slide..|
(YouTube !roll off the bed!:!falling off the slide!)
Note: 'Climb up the hill' and 'Climb the hill' both make sense. But 'falling the
cliff' doesn't or 'rolling the bed' means
an entirely different action. The bed and cliff are the GROUNDS, however, hill is
the object, and in this case up is an
INTENSIFIER.

|Unusually, however, even the most favorable trait "confers" a disadvantage in some
other
respect.|
(The kinds of mankind; an introduction to race and racism)

|If the individual with the mutation survives and has offspring, it will pass the
genetic
change along.|
(The kinds of mankind; an introduction to race and racism)

|, and they could slither through mud and sand instead of "flopping about"
helplessly as most
fish do when out of water|
(The kinds of mankind; an introduction to race and racism)

|Land animals "go about", for the most part, on four limbs, in a posture which is
called
pronograde|
(The kinds of mankind; an introduction to race and racism)

|This it leaves as 0, according to the first instruction, and it "moves off" one
step to the right, staying in internal
state 0|
(The Emperor's New Mind)

|During Roman times, salt was "worth _its weight" in Gold_|


(Weird Facts, Facebook)

|After "slogging through" it all you will have undoubtedly


expanded your knowledge, but you're no closer to actually writing a working
compiler|
(http://prog21.dadgum.com/30.html)

|What really caused it to jell was when I began to "branch off" on


my own and begin to try things on my own computer.|
(https://compilers.iecc.com/crenshaw/tutor1.txt)

|..and how much money you owe|


(Python programming
Author
John M. Zelle)

|the other way round|


(mean: the opposite of what is expected or supposed)

|Could we pretend this is the first time "we met"|


|I'm glad "we met"|
(The Time Traveler's Wife)

|Fuck this cartoon faking a total copy of doraemon| (Or rather faking Doraemon
totally?) (Saad's comment)

|Use this to retrieve definitions, pronunciations, example sentences, grammatical


information and word origins. It only works for dictionary headwords, so you may
need to use the Lemmatron first if your input is likely to be an inflected form
(e.g., 'swimming'). This """would""" return the linked headword (e.g., 'swim')
which you can then use in the Entries endpoint.|
(https://developer.oxforddictionaries.com/documentation)

|The >(x, 5) part of the previous program "would" be represented like this:...|
(http://eloquentjavascript.net/11_language.html)

|The word 'algorithm' is quite interesting; at first glance it may look as though
someone intended to write 'logarithm' but "jumbled up" the first four letters.|
(The Art of Computer Programming, Volume 1)

|A man with a fetish for surgical masks|(OED)

|Count Tolsto� picked up the work and opened it casually. Someone entered as he was
glancing "over" the pages.|
(https://archive.org/stream/annakareninatols00tolsiala#page/n10/mode/1up)

|..., but Heisenberg was not "given to" exaggeration|


(https://archive.org/stream/faustincopenhage00segr#page/3/mode/1up)

|Tall and thin, often slouching in hunched shoulders|


(https://archive.org/stream/faustincopenhage00segr#page/83/mode/1up)

|One day while cycling, trying to avoid a child who "ran out" in front of him/He
knew nothing of the rites
of passage of most other young boys [...], dashing out in front of trams.|
(https://books.google.com.pk/books?id=-
TT_z4llWoIC&printsec=frontcover&dq=paul+dirac+biography&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjx_4O
E3_LWAhWLwBQKHSwxDZIQ6AEIJTAA#v=onepage&q=paul%20dirac%20biography&f=false)

|Dirac and Oppenheimer were among the many students Born "invited to" his villa on
the Planckstrasse|(The Strangest Man; The Hidden Life of Paul Dirac, Quantum Genius
by Graham Farmelo)

|Instead of stationing his companion


at a distance he could have mounted there a
mirror, which would automatically send back the signal
immediately after receiving it.| (The Evolution of Physics)
|A physicist, an engineer, and a psychologist are "called in" as consultants to a
dairy farm whose production has been below par| (Title: Fear of physics : a guide
for the perplexed; Author: Krauss, Lawrence Maxwell)

|...before you 'came on' to bat| Imagery (A line; Indian English)

|But by then I might have children and all I would be saying {{{was}}} �Sit still�,
or �Don't eat with your fingers�, or �Eat up all your peas.�| (BNC; search: eat up)

|??He ate lunch for an hour|https://books.google.com.pk/books?


id=VF_JBBlWku0C&pg=PA213&dq=he+ate+lunch+for+an+hour&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwixrv3D1Z
TYAhVpQpoKHVLHCXkQ6AEIJjAA#v=onepage&q=he%20ate%20lunch%20for%20an%20hour&f=false

|phrasal verb semantics 1|https://books.google.com.pk/books?


id=VF_JBBlWku0C&pg=PA213&dq=he+ate+lunch+for+an+hour&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwixrv3D1Z
TYAhVpQpoKHVLHCXkQ6AEIJjAA#v=onepage&q=he%20ate%20lunch%20for%20an%20hour&f=false

|For a group with all the same gender, ein "takes on" the gender of the group|
(https://german.stackexchange.com/questions/18557/how-to-modify-einer-in-einer-von-
ihnen)

|I need (x) strong medication|


(Talking generically about stronger medication)

|It was (x) wonderful practice,|


(Surely)

|around: in or to many places throughout (a community or locality).


"cycling around the village"| (Dict Def)

|Socially, for the rest of his life, he was fully at ease only with people who
"could also have been" at ease in such a world|
(Bryan Magee, Schopenhaur)

|A spirited 18-year-old woman is "married off" to a man she barely knows| (In This
Corner of the World)

|"In the last decade" the field of psychology has made tremendous advances in the
integration of its many diverse areas|
(Psychology by McKeachie)

|Only after sedation was [a] physician able to


slide a long needle between two vertebra in the small of his back and
extract a few drops of cerebrospinal fluid.| (The Power of Habit, p. 4)

| The
rats in these labs have illuminated the complexity that occurs inside
our heads whenever we do something as mundane as brush our teeth
or back "the" car out of "the" driveway| (The Power of Habit, p. 13)

|These answers turn out to be most naturally expressed


not in [x] natural language, but in the language of mathematics.| (Not even wrong)

|Isaac Newton was "the" student of Barrow..|


(https://ia801705.us.archive.org/2/items/TheHistoryOfTheCalculusAndItsConceptualDev
elopment/Boyer-TheHistoryOfTheCalculusAndItsConceptualDevelopment.pdf)

You might also like