Example sentences of "[adv] [noun sg] bring " in BNC.

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1 Theo Steel , Director , Regional Railways South Wales and West said , ‘ The 125th Anniversary gives us a once only opportunity to bring steam back to this beautiful railway , and celebrate the occasion in style .
2 The Victorians tried to spoil the pleasures of puddings with foolish economies and in so doing brought Britain 's once fine reputation to its culinary knees .
3 so sunil brings two more and i one = total of 10. one more volunteer ? or we could play with then men just as spain did last night to crunch european champs denmark out ?
4 And now they would be dancing , as we said , dancing right down , with the elegance and economy of movement that only exhaustion brings , the careful and expert moves that only come at that particular time in the morning .
5 Just chance brought me then , if chance you call it ’ , says Tom Bombadil when he rescues the hobbits from Willow-man ; ruin was averted in the Northlands , says Gandalf in Appendix AIII , ‘ because I met Thorin Oakenshield one evening on the edge of spring in Bree .
6 The , there are two hundred people I am told , in the hall at the rear so I shall move shortly resolution to bring forward motion at the rear of the agenda forward , before that I shall deal with the routine council business of petitions , declarations of interest and members ' questions .
7 But yes , erm it , it 's partly sediment brought down from inland , it 's also the fact that you have offshore of Rye the area of Winchelsea Beach and so-called Rye Harbour which is somewhat detached from the town of Rye , and there 's been an enormous accumulation of shingle there , so that the Castle , which was built in , that 's Camber Castle which was built in the reign of Henry the Eighth , since that time the shoreline at Winchelsea Beach , as a result of the accumulation of shingle , has moved in excess of one point five kilometres seaward of that point , and so obviously erm Rye is now much further inland than it was at that time .
8 Where once she had dithered over choosing a suit for a new day at school , now imminence brought her fast to action — at least in the short term .
9 The quaint system known as wireless telegraphy then , telephones , radios and now television brought another revolution and the creation of a smaller world , the global village .
10 IF you have been giving you house plants a summer airing in the garden , it is now time to bring them in again .
11 Is it not about time to bring to a halt the silly idea which threatens the safety of Benefits Agency staff ?
12 ‘ Why did n't Pen bring you straight to us ? ’ demanded Charity , adding her own dazzling smile to the warmth of her mother 's greeting .
13 I had n't time to bring any food .
14 We examine how determination brought a vision into reality .
15 Then Candy brought forward a witness who assured police he had been drinking with the prisoner in the Star , another central Reading public house , at the time of the murder .
16 FUNNY how summer brings them all out of the woodwork is n't it ?
17 Naturally , it is almost duty to bring with bad news a panacea , and his is bottled as ‘ knowhow ’ .
18 Maybe desperation brought out survival instincts in the gangscum .
19 The pragmatic approach of the courts to the question of when publication brings the obligation to an end is shown in Speed Seal Ltd v Paddington [ 1985 ] 1 WLR 1327 where the publication of the plaintiff 's secrets had been made by the defendant .
20 The tourist boards see these areas as economic resources where development brings money .
21 Both tend to be high at the northern edge of the pack ice , over continental and island shelves where turbulence brings fresh resources to the surface , and at boundaries between water masses .
22 Emily wondered why Nan brought it up now .
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