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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The 1993 event started in York on 14 February and we will report on how they got on in the next issue .
2 Erm the two interact constantly and you can see foreign policy in some ways as a bridge between what goes on within the frame , the domestic framework of a country and what goes on in the international environment which surrounds it .
3 And much the same process of intensification at the edges goes on in The Spanish Gardener ( 1956 ) , where another little boy is prevented by his possessive and emotionally repressed father from developing his relationship with a gardener .
4 Having said this though , it is what goes on in the woman-only space , which defines it as graduated separatism or not .
5 erm There 's probably two-thirds of the logging that goes on in the tropical forest , which is about 5 million hectares a year erm is of that nature , so that the forest is left to recover after the logging has gone through .
6 Beckett remarks in Our Exagmination Round his Factification for Incamination of Work in progress , that Joyce 's work is ‘ not about something : it is that something itself ( Beckett 1929 and 1972 : 14 ) , and he goes on in the central part of his oeuvre , the trilogy Molloy , Malone Dies , The Unnamable ( 1950 — 2 ) , to create a kind of autonomy of his own — — as the Unnamable remarks , ‘ it all boils down to a question of words … all words , there 's nothing else ’ ( 1959 and 1979 : 308 ) .
7 We therefore found it necessary to look again at the empirical evidence about what goes on in the nuclear family — Who has the power ?
8 They are just as important though as what goes on in the main body of the conference centre .
9 After various consultations with interested parties , it was decided to carry on in the traditional manner .
10 Even then it should not apply where all that the Purchaser does is to carry on in the ordinary course of the business .
11 School students will stay on in the few settlements that will be left and in schools in Cuba , West Africa and other countries .
12 Lights began to go on in the dark houses , and I relished my melancholy to the last drop .
13 So I started to write a variation on the first bar and told her to go on in the same way and to keep to the idea .
14 Ordinarily , learning allows us to go on in the same way , to repeat what has been learned , whether it is a matter of fact ( that London is the capital of England ) or an action ( driving a car in familiar circumstances ) .
15 Kurdish people are hanging on in the northern part of Iraq , desperately in need of support and aid that must come to them before a harsh winter sets in .
16 However , unless I want junk food from one of the many establishments purveying it in this thoroughly commercialised station , all I have available to sit on in the huge concourse is a grubby metal flip-up slat a few inches wide .
17 Thank you for your interest , comrade , sit down in the listening corner and I shall begin .
18 Over supper we sit down in the low evening sun and watch the hills change from one blue to another , to mauve , to grey , to black .
19 I sit down in the grey plastic chair in the featureless room with McDunn and a man from the Welsh squad ; a big blond brindle guy in a tight grey suit ; he has a rugby player 's neck and steely eyes and huge hands that are clasped on the table , lying there like a mace of flesh and bone .
20 Starting with a bank loan of £4,000 , Roddick had no time to sit down in the early years and draw up a grandiose mission of what her organisation should set out to achieve .
21 She was glad to get home , to wash the grit from the paths off her feet , to sit down in the cool unglaring indoors .
22 He slung his cloak of feathers over the staff and Scathach helped him to sit down in the slight shelter that this garment offered .
23 For example , all the work on Mediterranean societies notes a strong preference for marriage between cousins who are the children of two brothers , which contrasts sharply with traditional marriage customs in Britain ( and elsewhere in northern Europe ) , where the marriage between close kin has been prohibited , although the range of kin to whom these prohibitions apply has been whittled down in the past century ( Wolfram , 1987 ) .
24 Back down in the secret gareden there 's still plenty to explore , including more tunnels — some of which are not empty …
25 ‘ No more risque sketches and you 're to get everything toned down in the second half . ’
26 He had the roads to Ruthyn and Denbigh under his eye from this eyrie , and Mold was not too far for a raid if the weather and the omens were good ; but since his active autumn of last year he had contented himself with holding and consolidating , and swooped down in the occasional raid along the border only to keep his hand in for greater things if the season should indicate the necessity .
27 Sick leave will be granted under the terms laid down in the Civil Service Pay and Conditions of Service Code .
28 The Trust is fortunate that its regional structure was conceived and laid down in the 1971 Act of Parliament .
29 We suggest that the procedure laid down in the Environmental Protection Act for registers under parts I and VI of the Act could be used in this situation .
30 This example of evaluation is related to the parameters laid down in the first part of the chapter .
  Next page