Example sentences of "[noun] and [v-ing] [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Meanwhile Stanley made short work of undoing the nuts , pulling off the old wheel and slipping on the new . |
2 | All I 'm saying is , I doubt if there are men practising the Black Arts and meeting on a regular basis for drunken orgies the way Parsons ’ and Dashwood 's men did . |
3 | Moldovan President Mircea Snegur imposed a state of emergency and direct presidential rule on March 28 , and called on the population to prepare to fight for the " motherland " , following a month of skirmishes and fighting in the self-proclaimed Dnestr republic [ for formation in September 1990 see p. 37723 ] . |
4 | In a tribal village , in Africa say , a boy is born to a particular woman who , obeying the customs of her people , proceeds to rear him either under conditions of high sociability or relative isolation and according to a particular regime of toilet training and weaning . |
5 | He sacrificed , he sacrificed the quick movement , the rapid changes of circumstance which a certain kind of reader demands , in order to match his description of thinking and feeling to the actual pace at which these things are experienced in real life . |
6 | Any books on the Alexander Method co-ordinate thinking and doing in a creative way . |
7 | If this advice is ignored , the torque of the seven-foot-diameter propeller , and the airflow it sends corkscrewing down the fuselage and acting on the large fin , causes the relatively light 207 to suddenly aim for the left-hand side of the runway . |
8 | If you use a pattern such as a basic 1x1 pattern ( that 's one hole punched , one hole blank , all across the card and alternating on the next row ) the resulting fabric has very short floats , not floats at all really ( swatch 6 ) . |
9 | ‘ Just a case of first-night nerves , ’ I mutter , unlocking my legs and grasping at the steaming mug.Ruthie Henshall opens tonight in Crazy For You at the Prince Edward Theatre , London . |
10 | She lay awake for a long time , looking at a pattern of moonlight on the stone floor of the bedroom and listening to the distant complaints of the chained dog she now knew to belong to Buck Kettering . |
11 | The stairwell echoed with the counterpointed sounds of pounding feet , of automatic doors heaving open and slamming shut , of trains arriving and departing , slowing down or gathering speed and hurtling along the narrow cavernous tunnels . |
12 | She was run over by a car travelling at excessive speed and overtaking on the wrong side . |
13 | I saw women dealing with having kids and working at the same time and the kids were happy because of the closeness with their mother . |
14 | There is a shortage of industrial sites in the South-east of England and rentals are now coming up after lagging behind offices and housing through the late 1980s . |
15 | Normally geometric data is entered directly into the system by calling up the appropriate entry command and responding with the necessary parameters and syntax . |
16 | It was like the feeling he used to get when he played another game from his childhood ; that of closing his eyes and walking for a certain number of steps along , say , a wide path in a park . |
17 | This new circular building houses a panoramic restaurant , with cabaret and dancing on the top floor . |
18 | ‘ Yes Sir , ’ David calmly answered , rising from his seat and walking across the cold classroom . |
19 | We must , nevertheless , beware of looking at Spain through Andalusian spectacles and generalizing from the violent and precarious structure of the latifundia districts . |
20 | His jaw worked loosely , and perspiration stood out all over his forehead , rivulets running down the side of his neck and soaking into the white collar . |
21 | But she is excellent in the play-extracts , lending Amanda in Private Lives just the right touch of acid mockery and hinting at a whole world of repressed longing as the suburban wife in Still Life ( the embryonic version of Brief Encounter ) . |
22 | While they were drinking their tea and talking about the filthy tap water , there was a knock on the outside door . |
23 | The obvious one is by a chemical message leaving one cell and diffusing to the next — rather like speaking . |
24 | By 14.45 , 2.45 p.m. , they were by-passing Sandwich and speeding beneath the Roman Fort at Richborough . |
25 | Journalists sought to divide universities into ‘ premier league ’ universities which would do research and teaching at a high level , and the others . |
26 | While I have not pretended that pre-Chernobyl data are extensive , there is compelling evidence about soil and grass contamination in the Cumbrian uplands before and after Chernobyl , based on research and monitoring by the Atomic Energy Authority , the Institute of Terrestrial Ecology , and BNFL . |
27 | But Crisp was still way ahead , disdaining his top weight and jumping with a breathtaking fluency . |
28 | Turn 1.5cm ( ⅝in ) of blind fabric and lining to the wrong side along the top edge . |
29 | A PETITION signed by local people has been handed to Wrexham Maelor Council objecting to its policy of wheel clamping cars and protesting against an alleged lack of security in ‘ pay and display ’ car parks . |
30 | Zak raised his eyes vaguely in my direction but it would have been tactless to disrupt the thoughts behind them , so I pressed on forward , traversing the dayniter and the sleeping cars and arriving at the forward dome car . |