Example sentences of "[noun] put [adv prt] " in BNC.

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1 Those animals put down had a merciful release .
2 Did you have the words put down ? ’
3 Similarly , prospective employees know better than to rely on landscaping or other signals put out by employers and attempt , instead , to find out the inside story from their contacts .
4 In the 1987 West German election eleven tiny parties put up candidates .
5 They could have done it last Friday put up with mind
6 Theoretically they mark a stage in the formation of organic soils , but as neither mosses nor lichens put down penetrating roots , and earthworms are lacking , organic material remains mostly superficial .
7 Overall , little more than half of them were serious candidates put up by Fianna Fail , Fine Gael , Labour and the Progressive Democrats , and on the ballot paper they were not listed for convenience of identification in party groups ; the other candidates were outsiders .
8 Lew Grade and his successors put up with them , because the regulators did not prevent the companies making a profit .
9 … with GCSE we 're plumping for having an external examiner to come into school , because the school years ago did a Mode 3 CSE , where all the kids put up an exhibition .
10 But there 's not fifty channels put on .
11 At low output all three channels put out some very convincing sounds .
12 What makes it so ‘ attractive ’ as a song is the fake affrontery most SCUM supporters put on .
13 The Freight and Transport Association wants the E C to step in after French lorry drivers put up blockades in retaliation at protests by their Spanish counterparts over fuel prices .
14 were these horse walks put in ?
15 I think you 've got to you 've got to accept that it is a legally binding contract , all of the policies , and I think you have to realise that in any arrangement that you make erm where there is a degree of legality , there has to be parameters put down .
16 Mrs Gore even risked the wrath of the record industry by campaigning to have warning labels put on particularly offensive records .
17 A small boy in pyjamas put down the basket he was weaving and looked at the face for a second or two , then turned back to his basket .
18 They used Druze fighters as a colonial militia just as they used members of the minority Muslim Alawite community in Syria to put down Sunni Muslim nationalist revolt .
19 He was reckoned to be one of the officers prepared to use force to put down the revolution .
20 The student starts off with a fairly definite hold on the world , built on reasonably stable concepts and ideas , but at the end of the course has grasped that very little of the intellectual world has enduring substance and that there are always more cognitive spectacles to put on .
21 Will you stay here and Mummy 'll get you a sweater to put on .
22 small , medium , I 'm sure that 's what I had , no they feel nice though , I did n't like the feel of the other ones , I expect there 's enough money in there , I 've got me plimsolls to put on
23 Elated , the Scots leaders gave orders for boats and crews from the harbour to put out , to deal with the wrecked and stranded vessels and their people .
24 Banished to the cabin , she lay there full of joy , feeling the crazy desire of the old boat to put out once again into mid-stream .
25 He 's buying up Arsenal to put out a strong reserve team :
26 When the price has been agreed your agent will confirm it in writing and notify your solicitor — but wait until the buyer 's survey has been completed and the house given the OK before celebrating or allowing your agent to put up his ‘ Sold Subject to Contract ’ sign .
27 It was the only Italian name I could think of in a hurry and I did n't have the nerve to put on the right accent to go with it . ’
28 Is that what you wanted was that the right card to put down ?
29 During July 1690 , demonstrating the French command of the Narrow Seas , small landing parties were put ashore on the Sussex coast to put up posters urging local residents , and especially army and navy officers , to support their former king , a somewhat pointless propaganda exercise , but a much more serious incursion followed .
30 The Cité des Sciences et de l'Industrie near the Porte de la Villette in Paris is one of those technological markers the French like to put down to show that architecture in their capital is not all ormulu and Belle Epoque .
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