Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] [prep] the [adj] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Injured Wednesday player-manager Trevor Francis has ruled himself out of the second round second leg leaving his side woefully short of striking cover as they attempt to recover a 3-1 first leg deficit . |
2 | In practice , those with established political views will have no difficulty in recognising comments with which they disagree and putting them promptly in the Favourable to Them column . |
3 | No country has yet settled on how to rid itself forever of the thousands of tonnes of highly radioactive nuclear waste that is piling up at power plants . |
4 | Their extra wide tyres cushion you perfectly over the roughest of roads and each bike has easy-to-use gears . |
5 | Weeping females were nothing out of the ordinary for him . |
6 | By promoting economic aspects and bringing them out into the open for everyone to see , we are contributing towards better informed decisions on the part of prescribers and policy makers alike . ’ |
7 | In this case , you should put him on to the defensive by maintaining a series of very strong attacks delivered from the correct distance . |
8 | ‘ You are all the same , ’ I had said — reducing her from an individual to a stereotype , lumping her in with the worst of the cherry berets . |
9 | There were no relatives to travel with her to the grave , only strangers to see her off on the darkest of journeys . |
10 | She never noticed if Alexandra was fully dressed or had stumbled straight from sleep in her night clothes but would welcome her always with the sweetest of smiles and a gentle reproof for leaving her alone . |
11 | Hall faces a three-match ban , which would also rule him out of the third round FA Cup tie at Middlesbrough on January 3 , three days before the Selhurst Park showdown . |
12 | Erm with a view to saying really , providing we 've got it in by the first of April next year |
13 | The man holding Connelly 's arm pushed it forward , forcing it down onto the largest of the electric rings , holding it there . |
14 | I had it down to the finest of details . |
15 | Thankfully there were no injuries and he and Ave Barlow managed to make it down to the best of the mountain safely . |
16 | I 'm here for one reason — to do a job , and I mean to carry it through to the best of my ability , with or without your approval . |
17 | They moved on , following it up to the first of the ruined buildings . |
18 | Though I may fail to carry it out to the full in this life , my faith in it shall abide . ’ |
19 | What a load of bull … the bidders fight it out for the best of British beef . |
20 | Teenagers Ronnie O'Sullivan and Andy Hicks took it out on the Welsh in the last 16 yesterday . |
21 | Now out of that two we 'll say well share it out between the four of you take a quarter each . |
22 | There 's six share it out between the two of us . |
23 | Okay so we 've got one pizza share it out between the two of us we get ? |
24 | Well what they mean when they say a half of a quarter is that we had a a quarter and we 've shared it out between the two of it so we 've got half to that each . |
25 | an and we 're gon na get it out by the first of June . |
26 | But with a one-year guarantee , is it really worth the extra for a service contract ? |
27 | 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 . |
28 | Because they argue and fight amongst themselves even in the thick of battle , Orcs and Goblins are affected by a special Animosity rule . |
29 | This is not the place to review housing policy since the war , except to note that market criteria asserted themselves again during the 1950s under the Conservative governments and were accepted by the Labour government in the mid-1960s . |
30 | This brings us on to the second of Dworkin 's grounds for excluding such background policy issues from the jurisdiction of the courts , for if no one has a right to any particular form of decision-making process — whether a right to a hearing itself , a right to cross-examine witnesses or to be given reasons for a decision -this can only be because such a right can not be derived from the master principle of equal concern and respect . |