Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [adv] [prep] a [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | This alternative view , a member of a small family of related although differing views , follows on naturally enough from a consideration of Hume 's . |
2 | We sat down rather disconsolately on a rock to eat a couple of fun-sized Mars bars while pondering out next move . |
3 | ‘ You 'll be all right there for a while , ’ she told him , tying on the lid with a piece of string . |
4 | His main powers concern external relations , defence and , perhaps most significantly for a supporter of the death penalty , the ultimate say on whether a condemned man will hang . |
5 | Overall , within the culture of antislavery economic boycott and free-produce activities worked much less significantly as a way of drawing in support than as a mark which some abolitionists chose to display of their antislavery identity . |
6 | He had that high-coloured English complexion , which looks so much better with a suntan . |
7 | The real Cardiff Bay barrage story is rather different from the one on the poster ( enough so far for a residents ' association , the Cardiff Flood Action Committee , to have complained to the Advertising Standards Authority , and for the RSPB to be considering following suit ) . |
8 | It is it is in a way is n't it well very much so not just in a way it 's very much because we have what 's that saying we say a picture is paints a thousand words yeah ? |
9 | His expression remained as unchanged as if she 'd never spoken , and she was gripped all over again by a longing to shatter that icy exterior . |
10 | But they must prove themselves all over again against a Teddy McCarthy inspired Cork side . |
11 | This is the story of the Bristol Blenheim that was so painstakingly restored by Graham Warner and his team of enthusiasts , only to be destroyed so soon afterwards in a crash . |
12 | In practice , by 1975 , the resistance to this approach proved so great that settlement was the real objective , with the justification that farming families could be supported in every way — agriculturally , medically and educationally — much more effectively on a group basis . |
13 | Both tables conceal significant variations in responses between readers of ‘ quality ’ and ‘ tabloid ’ newspapers ( Table 1.3 ) : the former remain wedded to their preferred medium , using it much more extensively as a means of surveying the world in depth , whilst readers of tabloid newspapers rely more heavily on television and also tend to attach greater credibility to it as a source of news ( Table 1.4 ) . |
14 | Tutoring ideas could be used much more widely as a way of helping both older and younger students , for example with older pupils helping younger ones in their own schools . |
15 | By the late 19th century , hard-knotted rugs had almost ceased to be made in Europe , as the advent of weaving machines meant that rugs could be produced much more quickly at a fraction of the cost . |
16 | He was tracked down early yesterday to a flat in Cathcart Road , Kensington , west London . |
17 | When Coleridge and the Wordsworths met together once more after a separation of several weeks , it was in the knowledge that the Alfoxden year would soon be over . |
18 | You settle down more quickly in a place you know rather than a new place where you need time to get used to the seating , the lighting , the visual distractions . |
19 | On the basis of this analogy we may call a ring current a magnetic dipole , or more precisely we should say that sufficiently far away from a ring current the magnetic field appears as if it was created by two closely spaced magnetic charges ( which of course do not exist ) . |
20 | MainMan was more about Tony than it was about David although David and Tony worked extremely well together as a team , but I think they each had individual goals they wanted to accomplish . |
21 | Looking back , it seems a wonderful enough thing that I who am this , and she who is that , commencing so far away a life that , after such sufferings borne together and apart , ended so tranquilly there in a world so stable — that she and I should have passed through so much , good chance and evil chance , sad hours and joyful , all lived down and swept away into the little heap of dust that is a life . |
22 | Therefore , in order to maintain control it can not specify the production function and so on explicitly as a constraint . |
23 | I mean you may want to er for example , you know in some ways some of the responses may fit in quite nicely as a point on a scale or something like that , you may have some , you know , be able to in fact I advise you to come up with a fair number of quantitative type questions |
24 | Oh are you going to go down there then for a weekend ? |
25 | Water was coming in very fast through a hole in the bottom of the boat ! |
26 | In this chapter , I have sounded much too much like a philosopher . |
27 | So very early in a horse 's life it establishes eating habits , and the horse may be very reluctant to change these habits when it is mature . |
28 | You sat down very glumly in a compartment , drank your beer and went out . |
29 | This was weighted with a large wooden tag charred at the end where Father Barnes had put it down too close to a gas flame . |
30 | I have in my own way tried to point out that , of the world 's leading rugby nations , the game in south Africa has suffered badly not only as a result of its years of isolation — as many of those who have just visited the country during the New Zealand and Australian tours believe — but precisely because our officials have for a very long time been at the forefront of the trend towards professionalism . |