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

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1 Bishop Harris , who has welcomed me so warmly , has expressed his willingness to continue on until the end of the year whilst I complete my own duties in Westminster diocese .
2 The princess , in a royal purple suit-dress , pushed on in front to sign the visitors ' book while the prince wandered off at the end , leaving his wife in his wake .
3 Speed came on towards the end , but did n't have chance to make much of an impact .
4 On top of it there was a copper funnel , and there were rods coming out of the end of the funnel attached to a wheel .
5 Fortinbras coming in at the end , when Hamlet 's dead and everyone 's dead .
6 However , according to Dave Ball — who was European Marketing Director for Artisoft at the time but has now switched camps to take up the same role at Performance — the deal fell through at the end of last year .
7 The tension fizzles out towards the end but Dahl 's exploration of human greed , emotional betrayal and hair-trigger violence is very involving and handsome to look at .
8 It is therefore particularly fitting that it is a charity associated with the teaching profession hat takes some of the books left over at the end of the sale to ‘ sent to countries in dire need ’ , as Lewis Romanis , former Headmaster of Boroughmuir School , put it in his gracious thank-you letter .
9 Rex leafed through to the end of the book .
10 When that white light comes down at the end
11 The latest figures from the Home Office show that the largest of the 60 seizures of the drug made up to the end of June this year was 40 grammes in Nottingham .
12 But in fact they stopped well short of this principle , because they believed that the peculiar organization of meaning in poetry led back in the end to the ‘ real ’ world .
13 The consolidated financial statements include those of the Company and all its subsidiaries made up to the end of the financial year .
14 Should Blackburn hold on to the end , do n't taunt Kenny Dalglish about buying the title .
15 He hopes to have around 400 pubs snapped up by the end of the year .
16 And they really look like it and when you go a load of ash comes out of the end of it .
17 From a normal sailing position with hands equally spaced either side of the balance point ( marked by tape ) , the back hand B slides down towards the end of the boom .
18 If you go on holiday for a month , you want another pay cheque going in at the end of the month .
19 The 21-year-old Scottish Under-21 international , who was linked with Rangers during the summer , is one of 10 Forest players whose current contracts run out at the end of the season .
20 The current contracts run out at the end of the month .
21 Tables listing 60 endowment companies published in the periodical Planned Savings show that the top performers for endowment policies paying out at the end of 1990 could do anything up to twice as well as companies at the bottom of the table .
22 Helen came in towards the end , and , with no outside calls for her to go to , Joanna looked rather depressed .
23 The fraction of each configuration , P i , P h , and P s , measured from the respective peak areas , can be related to ρ m the probability that a monomer adding on to the end of a growing chain will have the same configuration as the unit it is joining .
24 The remark popped out at the end of an extended tour of Nicholson 's pubs .
25 So the team flew out at the end of November for their Busman 's Holiday , where they 'll see tropical plants grown in hot springs .
26 They just add the period lapsed on to the end of your mortgage term .
27 Prost won out in the end and then went off in persuit of Hill …
28 And then , terribly pleased with that demonstration , the anthropologist goes on to try to fit in everything : and a good anthropologist is one who completes the picture and appears to have no pieces left over at the end .
29 However , as Clementina Black pointed out at the end of her inquiry into married women 's work for the Women 's Industrial Council , some women worked when the family income was already adequate , because they prized their independence : ‘ A shilling of your own is worth two that he gives you ’ .
30 A lack of narrative drive leaves the reader with piecemeal vignettes , an impression confirmed by the poems tacked on at the end of the book .
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