Example sentences of "[verb] [adv prt] [prep] the other [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 But trampolining wo n't be catching on with the other animals .
2 The big cat started to swing on to the other tack but a swell caught her bow , slamming her back .
3 The people who are seizing and occupying the present time can not belong in my colour , they 're like the bits that leap out of a spinning bowl , too heavy , too separate and distinct to be blended in with the other substances ; red-hot stones , flung out and setting on fire the place where they land .
4 There is a fire-tinge of violence to it here in New York , as there is to everything in this city , which just wo n't slow down like the other city did and get more innocent and less crazy and less dirty-colourful .
5 They aimed to pass over to the other side of the stockade through the gap between one section and the other , where the bridge spanned the stream .
6 Sorry , the ghost has n't come over from the other side of the door , it just keeps moving by itself .
7 Athelstan stood for a moment in disbelief , then he moved over to the other bed post : there , in the centre , the artist had etched a life-like horse .
8 He moved over to the other side of the office and had begun searching through a well-stocked bookshelf when the phone on his desk rang close by Folly 's hand .
9 The play moved over to the other side of the field and they stopped their conversation for a moment to follow it .
10 You 've always made it quite clear that you were staying here and that I could fuck off to the other end of the world for all you cared .
11 When Maidstone had finished , Franco thought for a moment , shrugged and wandered off to the other end of the bar .
12 He drew up on the other side of the tall white gates and fished in his grey sack .
13 And this is how Freud explains Wilson 's inability to stand up to the other men , like Woodrow , like Cle Clements or Lloyd George , who were rather aggressive , and er , were , were kind of pushing all the time , what they could out of the , out of the peace settlement , and what , er the book shows , is that Woodrow Wilson would have confrontations with them and say a lot of fine words , and then the next day , he would , he would give it all away , as it were , he would , he would be ill or he 'll backtrack , or when the actual agreements came to be signed , he , he would n't do what he said he would , er , wh what he did .
14 The phone was picked up at the other end and Charles pressed his two p into the coinbox .
15 Well you 've got another two or three hours on the journey , but having said tha well if you get picked up at the other end it 's not too bad .
16 The consortium has underwritten half the purchase price , but has asked the Government to come up with the other half .
17 A wounded horse limped in the wheat , trying to catch up with the other cavalry horses .
18 Their union has not only survived the rigours of a decade , but has come out at the other end stronger than ever .
19 Though I suppose one has to make a passing one has to make a passing er reference to the information which has come out in the other house erm and be publicised this weekend in the press but er er at one million almost one million a slug , M E Ps do n't come cheap , er I suppose one however would want to make allowances for the fact that they have three parliamentary buildings , that they have to go on trips and that er they have to pay er er I suppose German rates for their bureaucracy so there clearly are exceptional factors and indeed I would n't want to make too much of that .
20 Looking at Penguin er , it was a very difficult year but the profit you see was erm , is after providing for the losses up to the date we disposed of Smith Mark and also making further provision on , on er , leases when we moved out of the other buildings , centralized the editorial and er , administrative functions into one office and , and but for that you would see that the er , the Penguin profit would have moved ahead from the year before .
21 So what 's interesting here is that they seem to be having a conversation about un the university matters , the history department and so on but in fact there 's this kind of subtext going on here in which both of them want to find out about the other person 's children and both of them are being very mysterious and avoiding the question .
22 She resolved to find out about the other woman .
23 The Commission was to have not just the right to initiate and recommend policy to its executive partner , the Council of Ministers , but also the task of ensuring that the provisions of the treaty and policies emanating from the Council of Ministers were carried out by the other institutions and the member states .
24 She moved around to the other side of the desk .
25 And a similar state of affairs had meanwhile come about on the other side of the lines .
26 As for cutting it away , it was obvious that to wander about on the other side of the rampart was to invite certain death .
27 I moved round to the other windows , but I could not see her in any of the rooms .
28 He was about to apologize , remembered the microphone , then moved round to the other side of the desk and sat down .
29 If one of these groups were to go over to the other side — as the army did in Romania — the balance of forces would be altered .
30 car conked out so Vicki stayed with the car and her who we were going to take a walk in Ruddington , and I walked home with her to get Malcolm to go over with the other car .
  Next page