Example sentences of "[adv] and [adv] [art] [noun] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I mean the Bradford Dukes always win at Bradford because I 've heard on the grapevine , not from me , that they 've got little bumps round the bends and they fill them in and only the Bradford riders know whereabouts they are , so they skirt round them .
2 We both got our heads down and then a scratching noise started up Steve is that you ?
3 The concept clearly was meant to establish a College in the broad sense of a learned foundation , whereas what emerged almost inevitably , from the actual circumstances of its establishment and funding , degenerated into what was to remain for a century basically and predominantly a horse infirmary .
4 ( Tramp art is an old American form of folk art in which small pieces of wood are laid together and then a plaster cast taken . )
5 Backwards and forwards the engine passes , increasing its load at each operation , until behind its tender it may have a string of vehicles more than two hundred yards in length with a brake van in the rear .
6 Onward and upward the track wound , clinging to the side of the ridge like a pale slippery centipede .
7 there was this witch doctor and Scooby Doo was — he was standing by the witch doctor and the witch doctor went in and he went — he went chasing him Scooby Doo went in the cupboard with Shaggy and got some clothes on and they were acting on and then the witch doctor pressed the button and they turned on again then and then Scooby was acting and then they just take him and he keeped on switching it until they all came round and the all clothes fell off him .
8 The port was growing quickly and already the customs office was the busiest in Australia .
9 In radio control parlance this is called the frame rate and determines how rapidly and smoothly the servo position can be updated .
10 Colonic washout reduces rapidly and significantly the serum concentrations of 5-ASA and Ac-5-ASA as seen in Table IV .
11 Then , as Mike became more and more the lead guitarist , I played more and more bass .
12 Possibly and sometimes the C C Q.
13 That 's right the tenth replacement depot in Lichfield and they used to come round to Walsall looking for absentees and deserters and they there was actually a shooting match in Street the MPs started firing the guns at these fellas who 'd gone absent without leave , and , but as I understand I remember at the time there was a lot of racism in America then and they , they picked these coloured fellas up and apparently the C O at Lichfield was very much a southern colonel and he was a racist and they used to chain these coloured guys up behind the trucks and make them walk all the way back to Lichfield behind the trucks driving the trucks at walking pace and I understand there was a , a salver , a commemorative salver in the Town Hall to be presented to him , and some an MP in the Council he were looking for this colonel , but as I understand he was court-martialled after the war for racism and so I do n't think he 'd be wanting , wanted to be connected with Walsall any more , so but this was
14 Mr Pattison said : ‘ They started to push her from behind and she could hear that she was getting nearer and nearer the River Skerne .
15 The announcement was greeted with some scepticism by environmental groups , with Greenpeace describing it as " purely and simply a public relations exercise " .
16 The Model Contract Conditions set out fairly and succinctly the principle obligations of the solicitors and of the authority .
17 Send and return jacks come next , then a three-pin balanced XLR out and finally the footswitch jack socket for the ‘ solo ’ channel .
18 On the ‘ real resource ’ view a public sector project uses up real resources now and hence the opportunity cost is incurred now in the form of reduced private sector consumption ; in the future , debt interest payments must be paid and the bonds redeemed if they are not perpetual ones .
19 That 's history now and already the planning process is under way to take Canada on to 1995 and the next World Cup , wherever that may be .
20 And every now and again a Crossley tender carrying a company of Black and Tans , their guns held at a threatening angle , would butt its way through the press , its progress-retarded — sometimes even brought to a halt — by as unlikely a variety of breakdowns and traffic jams as the doggedly obstructive citizens of Cork could improvise this side of outright rebellion .
21 Now and again the Lady Francesca asks us to take the good nuns gifts of embroidery . ’
22 Florence Nightingale has been the inspiration for twentieth-century nursing ; every now and then a historian attempts to point out that there may have been aspects of her life which were not quite so saintly as we believe , but this does not shatter her image .
23 Every now and then a jack pike would rupture the tranquillity as it marauded the easy pickings .
24 Every now and then the fossil record throws up fossils which are palaeontological puzzles .
25 Oh yes , I know , this that one is really and truly an office lamp .
26 Erm , the first one is a letter from Ron , he , he 's in Milton Keynes with his family at the moment , on holiday , and he will be missing this meeting action tomorrow and unfortunately the September Executive , erm , he 's reported on the erm market stall which I 'll come to a bit later , I ask you for details about that and for the enclose with it erm , a statement issued by the association nationally on pensioner 's and the Poll Tax .
27 We need more teachers , we need more space , we need more time … if you 've seen the library at lunchtime it 's just a mass of people swarming around and eventually the over.popularity works against its correct function .
28 Garrison Savanah has a few tales to tell … he won the big race at Cheltenham 3 years ago and tomorrow the Gloucestershire favourite will be off and running for the big prize at Newbury
29 It is one of the ‘ Ports de Cize ’ , the collective name for the several cols to be found in the mountains here and once the Summus Pyrenaeus of the Romans , who also chose to cross them above Saint-Jean .
30 I became there and then the cricket fanatic I have remained ever since , ’ he recalled in Maurice Tate ( 1976 ) .
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