Example sentences of "[verb] [pn reflx] [prep] the [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 We had stopped trailing around after the men in the left , contorting ourselves in the hope of receiving some grudging crumbs of approval .
2 We judge ourselves by the time from call-out to getting the problem fixed which is an average of 63 minutes , ’ he said .
3 Far from being an academic abstraction , the notion of discourse type is something we all use every day in order to orient ourselves towards the communication in which we are involved .
4 We would obviously like to see ourselves as the organ of a revolutionary party , however embryonic it may be . ’
5 Even if we confine ourselves for the moment to the late sixth and fifth centuries B.C. , when the options were more limited , the road of the Rhone was not the only route for traffic between Celts and Greeks .
6 Even if we confine ourselves to the difference of aim between reformist and revolutionary parties ( or of social movements , which can be classified in a similar way ) , the distinction can not always be made in an absolutely clear-cut fashion .
7 That 's why we should now make a start on reminding ourselves of the relevance of our own particular life story .
8 To be humble is learning to know ourselves in the light of the knowledge of God .
9 Perhaps now we can take Mill 's insight on board without opening ourselves to the charge of arbitrariness .
10 Me and Sam missed our way and found ourselves on the edge of Foxton Mire .
11 This we did , for in about an hour and a quarter from the time of our beginning the ascent , we found ourselves on the top of this dreadful precipice , and in possession of some very uncommon plants … ’
12 Within three weeks I had handed in my dissertation , Lorne had assembled the rudimentary equipment , and with more bravado than common sense we found ourselves on the island of Celebes in the South China Sea .
13 Though the CPRS had drawn up an agenda in four parts , starting with our relationship with the external world , we soon found ourselves in the middle of a second reading debate over the whole field .
14 We found ourselves in the middle of nowhere .
15 The City streets were fairly quiet of course , but as we passed into the suburbs we found ourselves in the midst of the Saturday morning shopping rush .
16 Squashed between the driver and the mechanic on top of the engine housing in the first truck , we found ourselves in the role of unwitting umpires , keeping the two men from each other 's throats .
17 The SS will advertise our willingness to inform ourselves about the needs of industry .
18 We tend to isolate ourselves from the rest of the natural world and yet we are very much a part of it .
19 As Christian communicators in Asia we place ourselves at the service of those challenges , well aware that we need to conscientise people as much as we need to be conscientised .
20 He first isolated pure lines of eight paired traits ; of which we shall confine ourselves to the lines of tall ’ and ‘ short ’ peas .
21 Seating ourselves on the trunk of an old ash-tree that stretched along the ground , Coleridge read aloud with a sonorous and musical voice , the ballad of Betty Foy .
22 ‘ And I shall tell you , my Lord Coroner , how Edmund Brampton , steward to Sir Thomas Springall , did not hang himself in the garret of that house in Cheapside ! ’
23 How bitter must he be to find himself in the position in which he was now ?
24 He liked some music but generally was n't musical and was always slightly put off to find himself in the company of those who were .
25 Muller , however , is surprised to find himself in the company of players he once idolised , and he has yet to recognise that he is about to become a similar figure .
26 ‘ If man can not create anything or move anybody , if he can not break out of the prison of his total narcissism and isolation , he can escape the unbearable sense of vital impotence and nothingness only by affirming himself in the act of destruction of the life that he is unable to create .
27 Sir Robert Carey , Warden of the English Middle March , had been in London visiting the queen , but had prudently arranged for relays of horses to be ready for him between the capital and Edinburgh , so that he could ingratiate himself with the King of Scots by being the first to arrive with the news that he was now King of England also .
28 He found himself with the duty of helping to make a vital decision for the Church of England at a moment in its destiny .
29 McLeish found himself on the verge of suggesting that a thoroughly unpleasant time in a New York jail might succeed in curing Tristram where all other methods , including exhortation , loving family support and a spell in a comfortable private hospital in Devon , had failed .
30 He ran the company as if he had suddenly and unexpectedly found himself on the footplate of a runaway engine .
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