Example sentences of "[verb] [v-ing] [adv prt] [prep] [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 LHX lacks instant appeal and involves swotting up on the options available .
2 More film roles are expected to come rolling in after the Oscars on 29 March , although Thompson claims she is a no-hoper for glamorous parts .
3 He did n't expect us to come rolling out of the pubs drunk , and the Yorkshire pudding to get flung at the ceiling with the gravy running down the walls like the tears of a black madonna .
4 He 's done all the work at the scene — all anyone can do — and then he has to cool his heels with the rest of us , waiting for God 's gift to forensic pathology to come screaming up with a police escort and break the news to us that what we all thought was a corpse is — surprise , surprise indeed a corpse , and that we can safely move the body . "
5 ‘ They had to come streaming out of the forests and down to the Bright Palace , in answer to the summons of their Lords … ’
6 And , every twenty minutes or so , a storm broke : thunder rumbled , lightning flickered , and tropical rain came crashing down from the showerheads fitted in the ceiling .
7 She must have sat alone there for a good quarter of an hour , singing to herself , before Henry and Lettice came crashing back through the woods , squealing that they had seen Humphrey and Janet and must take to the skiff at once .
8 After being seen whizzing out of the doors of a rink , he had to skate at speed along a footpath of the common , round a spiral pedestrian walkway , on to a road , grab the back of a passing bus , let go , cut across a main road between cars coming in both directions , go across another road — between the wheels of a moving articulated lorry — and end up in a babywear shop , somersaulting into a cot .
9 A midwinter day … the wind to the north , the sky in rags , hail whipping in from the islands in dark squalls .
10 Mr Tate said although they felt quite safe on the eighth floor it was disconcerting to see armed security guards and smoke bellowing up through the skyscrapers .
11 Otley came tearing back down the stairs white as a sheet and put the mug of cocoa down on the table .
12 ‘ And I knew it from that first day when you came driving down to the chais like a crazy woman .
13 Hotspur put up a hand to the furred collar of his cloak , and let it slide from his shoulders ; and like a silent and attentive valet the girl came gliding out of the shadows and took it from him .
14 Yet around the time that Servan-Schreiber was receiving his first royalty cheques , oriental faces could be seen popping up behind the walls at the Isle of Man TT races .
15 The sound of singing came drifting up from the quays below .
16 ‘ That 's him , then , all gone , ’ Gloria said , before a nurse came scurrying out through the doors , took her by the arm and led her back into the ward .
17 Never , since he was a child , had he missed coming up to the Foinmen on Beltane .
18 There , suspended just above the domes and minarets of the old city , a perfect silver crescent could be seen shining out over the rooftops .
19 One Tory MP was seen coming out of the Whips ' office in tears before last night 's vote .
20 The only reliable way to see them was to pass in front of the building and turn left into the road to the cemetery : from that side some of them could be seen craning out of the windows and waving .
21 Eight of the men came running out of the trees and heaved at the sides of the lorry .
22 There was a yell , and then Burun came trotting back through the trees .
23 Finally she dived through the alley by the Revuebar and into the market on Berwick Street , a drab thoroughfare enlivened by a sudden riot of colour in the narrow sunlight that came slanting down between the buildings — the yellow awnings over the stalls , the bright shades of new fruit , the brilliant white of new cardboard .
24 The organ could not approach this strangled cry that came welling up from the bowels , from the primitive consciousness of life , of pain , of joy ; the long , tortured note that slowly unwound your intestines to be twanged by the electric guitarist .
25 They had taken refuge from the insects and the dew when sanity returned , and were lying gazing up at the stars .
26 Over the summer , word of mouth made Quadrant Park one of the most queued-for nights in the north ; now coachloads from Glasgow , Newcastle and even Manchester begin lining up amid the warehouses and oil tanks at 8pm .
27 ‘ Sure , I like hanging around with the guys , playing golf , having a beer but I also like ladies , too , ’ he protests .
28 At first , they enjoyed looking out of the windows , but then they became sleepy .
29 Alerted by a grapevine of unparalleled efficiency to the presence of honkies with money , hitherto undiscovered talents began swarming in from the ghettos and down from the hills , bearing tape-recordings , even guitars , for impromptu auditions .
30 but he keeps going up to the gnomes and saying hello is that no he come home the other night and the , we , no the other day Sam he tipped all the bloody soil out of the earth and done something else , he said he 's a naughty boy and she 's said to Sam he wants a smacking he said I 'm not smacking him
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