Example sentences of "[verb] [pn reflx] [adv] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | We left Paris by the Porte D'Orleans and found ourselves back amongst the tilled meadows and windmills which ring the city . |
2 | We will confine ourselves here to the state-owned case , leaving regulation to chapter 5 . |
3 | We shall confine ourselves here to the statutory requirements which must be observed . |
4 | His spirit had not been broken ; rather he was afraid of tearing himself apart with the involuntary jerking of one side of his limbs in the opposite direction to the other . |
5 | He was speaking as he jerked himself out on the sandy foreshore . |
6 | In the summer of 1675 , in the course of Louis XIV 's Dutch War , he found himself up against the great imperial general Montecucculi , who in the previous year had outmanoeuvred Turenne to capture Bonn . |
7 | Cornelius fanned at his trouser bottoms and slowly drew himself back into the vertical plane . |
8 | There was no night-porter , but he had a key and he let himself in to the deserted lobby . |
9 | Cathy went into the shop and Wycliffe let himself out into the little hall from which stairs led up to the flat . |
10 | He cut the power by the meter and collected his roll and the half-completed form from the kitchen table before he let himself out through the back door . |
11 | He let himself out of the front door and when he was beyond the shelter of the porch he felt the sting of rain on his cheeks . |
12 | Then , looking at the man as if he was so much dirt , he let himself out of the front door . |
13 | When he was satisfied that everything was straight , he let himself out of the back door . |
14 | And he was still worrying about how to pass himself off as the long-dead Bard when police nicked him dithering outside a bank . |
15 | Pinnacle , which currently offers a Sparc 2 CPU board , will leverage its experience in the Sun spares , repair and trade-in hardware business — combined with the SunSoft deal — to launch itself in to the compatible market proper , backed by a hefty advertisement campaign . |
16 | It is also the case that , in practice , social purpose Adult Education has frequently concerned itself exclusively with the small minority of politically active , leftist members of the working class , usually , though not always , via trade union education . |
17 | Between the subtle observations of the period of about 270–240 B.C. and the adulation of poems like that by Melinno — which , though undated , places itself naturally in the early second century — we have to recognize a gap . |
18 | Carolyn let herself out of the french windows and made her way along the trodden track to her garden , now a dug rectangle of some eight by twelve yards , backing on to the wall of Keswick 's warehouse . |
19 | As she let herself in at the front door her mother 's voice came booming out of the kitchen . |
20 | You can watch the newsreader 's lips getting into gear , like Fatima Whitbread psyching herself up for the big throw . |
21 | Perdita cried unashamedly after they left , fleeing to her bare room and hurling herself down on the pink counterpane . |
22 | She felt sticky and heavy , as if she was trying to pull herself out of the chlorinated pool with the water dragging at her bulk , breaking the surface tension with an effort . |
23 | At Universal , she found herself painfully opposite the eponymous talking mule in Francis Joins The Wacs ( 1954 ) and as the female lead in Abbott and Costello Meet the Keystone Cops , ( 1955 ) but had delightful moments in Has Anybody Seen My Gal ? ( 1952 ) singing ‘ The Red Red Robin ’ while bobbing around doing the housework . |
24 | Threading her way as diligently as she could through the mass of humanity , it was with a sigh of relief that she eventually found herself back in the vast City Hall square . |
25 | By this pact Japan ranged herself firmly against the European nations with colonies in East and Southeast Asia . |
26 | We may expect new conventions governing syntactic combinations — in our example the Subject-Object-Verb complex — to establish themselves quickly in the evolving language of any group whose members are bright enough to tumble to the meanings of such innovations . |
27 | Separate toilets for younger children , staggered playtimes or separate playgrounds for under-fives also mark schools that are really gearing themselves up to the educational needs of these younger pupils . |
28 | There were a great number of these at different points along the Straits , but there were three that found themselves right in the thick of things . |
29 | ‘ So I climbed into the back seat , ’ he recalled , ‘ stripped off the suit I was wearing and put on my pyjamas , thinking I could dry myself afterwards with the spare pair . |
30 | I offer my congratulations to the workers and management of Yarrow , who have picked themselves up after the bitter disappointment of losing the last order , despite having built the first of class and many of the subsequent ships . |