Example sentences of "hang [adv] [art] [adj] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | The two pictures hanging on the wooden beam in the left of the photograph perhaps show a more popular way of displaying miniatures , which is nonetheless very attractive . |
2 | But we do talk and what I know is you are essentially a decent and totally wonderful human being and I 'll hang around a long time for you . |
3 | Sniffing crossly , she went upstairs herself and lovingly hung up the Persian lamb in the clothes closet . |
4 | The threat of it , as I understand , hangs over a young man of your Order . |
5 | Pillars , walls , ceiling , all have been painted , and there are even paintings hung on the upper walls of the nave above the arches , which are a mixture of round and pointed . |
6 | Its magnificent sculptured bronze doors still exist but are now on view inside the church , hung on the inner side of the west portal . |
7 | Well , each of the seven great churches had a peel of six bells that hung on the outside wall of the church tower . |
8 | My father 's feelings towards the General were , naturally , those of utmost loathing ; but he realized too that his employer 's present business aspirations hung on the smooth running of the house party — which with some eighteen or so people expected would be no trifling affair . |
9 | Guruji took over the building in 1963 and hung out a simple sign with the inscription Manasik Chikitsa Kendra — ‘ Centre for the Treatment of Mental Illnesses ’ . |
10 | At eighteen — the period of the mousseline de soie dress — she had found herself hanging around a certain area of Twickenham , where they were then living , in the hopes of encountering the doctor 's son , with whom she had had a strangled conversation at some social gathering . |
11 | Sterling 's immediate fortunes are widely believed to hang on a positive reception to Mr Lawson 's speech . |
12 | To me it seemed to hang on the right lip for at least two seconds before it dropped in . |
13 | Little Pete and Ellie who used to hang on the very words of Uncle John . |
14 | Of course , Sar n't Major James Graham Biggleswade could n't exactly go back to Blighty and expect them to hang out the welcome mat in Fulham , not after that tricky bit of bloody buggering business down in the Falklands — oh , excuuuuse meeee , the Mal -bloody-buggering- vinas — back in ‘ 81 . |