Example sentences of "[verb] they [adv] on [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The noise is formidable , for the rocks clatter and bang away down a steel chute that dumps them back on the ground .
2 so if I bring them down on the floor , you know that if they say maybe naughty
3 Nevertheless there is little doubt that in the cases of Frederick and Joseph at least a feeling that an enlightened ruler ought to be above merely personal and family considerations , that it was his duty to sacrifice them ruthlessly on the altar of the State , was a factor in their behaviour to their own blood relations .
4 Anyone seeing them together on the common outside Oswaldston would have taken them for husband and wife , though Hilary was by nearly three years the younger .
5 Counting out seven pound notes , he laid them carefully on the table .
6 Very slowly she took the headphones off and laid them carefully on the table , her eyes never leaving Luke 's for a moment .
7 He laid them out on the desk , got a plastic bag out of the bottom drawer of the filing cabinet and swept all the bits and pieces into it .
8 She rolled the two cloaks into a bundle and laid them down on the shore where the tide could come and take them .
9 The man with the shears laid them down on the grass , took a handkerchief from his pocket , made a knot in each of its four corners and placed this improvised sun-hat on his head .
10 I mean I do n't , I do n't know whether say they flung them out on the street is the right thing , cos I , I , I mean there 's all these places like Mencap and there 's a big one in Wellingborough
11 but the second way in which section fourteen arises is this slightly more oblique way , erm , it 's , it 's not really the question of competition law it 's more a question of administrative law or constitutional law , erm whether it arises on the question er , your Lordship will have to decide , but , if , if it does then we believe that our case is extremely strong , because what one is saying here is , is section fourteen a block to an article eighty five action , erm does it make it either virtually impossible or something lesser excessively difficult , er and we say er that that 's one aspect and two can we show it 's discriminatory , well we say first of all it is discriminatory because even on analysis of the bad faith argument they are putting in a claimant with an article eighty five case to an extraordinary length in order to make good his case , he first of all has to super declaration presumably that he is entitled to damages , but he ca n't get damages all he 's entitled to is the declaration if then do n't satisfy that claim by paying up and their not going to be ordered by the court to pay up because that 's a claim for damages and you ca n't have that then you have to sue them again on the basis of breach of bad faith , er no other provision in English law would go to that effect and that of course even , even that assumes whether rightly or wrongly and we say possibly wrongly that er , er the failure to comply with the judgment of the declaration would be bad faith within the meaning of the act , but even assuming it 's right it puts a plaintiff suing for breach of article eighty five in the worst position possible
12 So they have they have in fact embarked on a course which now lets these newspapers really deliver them up on a plate I mean they can fry them , they can bake them , they can grill them , they can roast them because they 've put themselves in a position where they now deserve the criticism and the level of imagery which they 're getting .
13 DRAWING THEM IN ON THE WIRRAL
14 A deadline was set up but it has come and gone and we no have no alternative but to reclaim the shares and place them back on the market .
15 If you must , kiss them once on the forehead when they say good night .
16 Press them carefully on the subject of the neighbours , the boundaries and which fences belong to whom .
17 with their help and medication , I mean you do n't sling them out on the street
18 Stripping off the rest of her wet clothes , she bundled them out on the landing , then irritably turned on the shower and stepped beneath the hot jets .
19 He lifted his hands feebly and , leaning forward , dropped them languidly on the blanket in front of him .
20 And Jim , when he comes in , they 're both , they 're both all , I 've pr priced them up on the top and er
21 They went into the staff-room and grabbed a coffee while they waited for the results , then they studied them together on the lightbox .
22 no here they are , I know I 've seen them somewhere on the window sill
23 However , the evidence of the fireman who was on the footplate of the engine that was hauling the express disproved the allegations of the railway company , for he had seen them together on the train after it had arrived at Birmingham New Street Station around 2.30 when the children had waved at him .
24 No , I 've never seen them there on a Thursday
25 You put them up on the door , they 're on the floor .
26 Put them up on the locker , will you ?
27 Asik watched as the mother passed around all of the sandwiches and put them daintily on the plates .
28 and she says she sat , she sat er still you know with her arms folded and all like that and she says , oh she says I think you er collect the books and stamp them and put them back on the shelves and she said they all laughed , but she got the job in opposition to er , a few others you know
29 You pick them up again you put them back on the door , he chucks them back on the floor .
30 Vivienne would pick them up and say , it 's alright I 'll just wash them down and put them back on the rack .
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