Example sentences of "[adv] some [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The boxer shorts from Barries ' were followed by shirts and socks , then by jackets and trousers from Di Stato ( Anzio 's high-street chain ) , and eventually some Hoage 's shoes .
2 Eventually some girls may have hunted , but without the same enthusiasm or hysteria as the boys .
3 I should have known that eventually some man would come along and take advantage of the situation .
4 Eventually some pressure or need caused the migration of one or more into already occupied territory .
5 and eventually some speech
6 Altogether some 10,000ft of ascent and descent are needed , often steep , rocky and energetic , so only fit , capable and committed walkers should attempt this route .
7 ( Latterly some states , e.g. Florida , have instituted their own ‘ blanket ’ testing programmes . )
8 The very next year ( 1590 ) he provided music for the pastoral interludes of Tasso 's Aminta and two other pastorals which was in an ‘ altro modo di cantare che l'ordinario ’ , presumably some kind of recitative .
9 Presumably some patrol ship on the high seas might log messages in this way , but it is clear that , as humans , our experience of utterances is not that we have recorded in memory a list of utterances to which are attached standard tags specifying time and place in these terms .
10 For some reason 17E did not follow until 12 June 1935 and 19E presumably some time in 1937 .
11 But Melville 's claim that James was ‘ vexed by some unkindly medicine ’ sounds more like a comment on sixteenth-century doctors than poisoners ; and his other explanation , that he died ‘ for displeasure ’ — presumably some form of extreme nervous exhaustion — is probably as close as we can get to what happened .
12 The witness was subsequently recalled and it was established that her particular work ( presumably some form of basting or binding ) could not be accomplished by machine .
13 whatever they were using as bait presumably some mackerel or something like that but , but as I was saying you could see it trailing through and then all , suddenly out of like nowhere this fish would come and like chase after it
14 Presumably some growth could have started before closure on a run-down line , but it would have been very small .
15 You would take on some responsibility immediately for particular areas and additional responsibilities are available to those with the ability and enthusiasm to take them on .
16 Having reluctantly cleared me of the charge of indulging in orgies with my entire sales force , you seem to have got it into your head that Lexy and I are carrying on some kind of affair .
17 It may disintegrate on impact or , if it survives that , it may carry on some distance under water .
18 All six degrees of freedom are seen to take on some zone of possible position or angle .
19 Then , as the young composer experiments at his consoles and keyboards , taking on some meat , becoming stronger , deeper .
20 If paragliders can at least get away with their sport when safely airborne , since they then take on some element of grace and beauty , the mountain biker will always look a clod .
21 He misses a risky plant , I take on some banana , and win on the pink .
22 Firstly , there were contracts restraining a person from carrying on some trade or business ; these were clearly subject to the doctrine .
23 Mark my words , a few slippery leaves , or later on some snow and ice , and I shall have some old people in my surgery with sprains and breaks .
24 If rebates are extensive this takes on some aspects of an income tax too .
25 But , so far away , might not her anxiety lighten , take on some perspective ?
26 In an age when insurance against all forms of liability is commonplace , it is surely not surprising or unjust if law makes persons who carry on some kinds of hazardous undertakings liable for the harm they do , unless they can excuse or justify it on some recognisable ground . ’
27 For once the Lovejoy actor 's old-fashioned charm deserted him as he plucked up courage to pass on some advice on her marriage lines .
28 He admits that in the Eighties the card took on some people who were not quite of the calibre of its existing client portfolio .
29 There is a suspicion — no more than that — of which I have no clear evidence , that blanket decisions are taken on some applications .
30 The first ( firm A ) is a levered firm and the second ( firm B ) is an unlevered firm which decides to take on some leverage by issuing a bond .
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