Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [prep] [art] next [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 If this happens , it is usually better to leave things for that year , and to take them right down after the next flowering .
2 The move to Apollo Place brought Minton to an area long associated with artists ; through a circular window half-way up the stairs he looked down on to the next door studio which had once belonged to Turner .
3 Perhaps only in the next life .
4 With the economy predicted to be on the upturn it is perhaps the right time for Allied to invest in the Firkin chain and cash in early on the next consumer boom .
5 well yes as soon as things get moving there then we would be ready really so hopefully in the next month or so
6 May you be doing so well into the next century !
7 Both scored highly in the first round but the French had done so well in the next round with three landing on the line , that only the RAF stood a chance of catching them .
8 ‘ If something was a loss , he was n't really concerned with that ; somebody else could clear that up — he was already on to the next thing .
9 We have to think a hundred years ahead , not just for the next year or two .
10 I think we outnumbered their support here , it was it gave the players a great lift , it was tremendous erm all credit to them erm we will drag even more along to the next game .
11 In that case the net must be gathered up with extreme care , since care taken now will mean the net can be set that much more easily at the next site .
12 The impression already given that , by and large , the women interviewed did not enjoy their work , is dissected and examined more thoroughly in the next chapter .
13 That such an interpretation , even though it deviates in important respects from Hume 's own intentions , is much less vulnerable to criticism , will be seen more clearly in the next chapter , when we analyse in greater depth the distinction between numerical and qualitative identity , and its ontological significance .
14 That this is the correct interpretation of the role of words in trusts emerges more clearly in the next section .
15 The distinction between controlling for a prior variable and for an intervening variable is drawn more sharply in the next section .
16 We shall explore this issue more fully in the next section .
17 Miller 's beautiful Figures will be discussed more fully in the next chapter .
18 This is dealt with more fully in the next chapter .
19 Nonetheless , the concept has been developed to include accessibility and this use is discussed more fully in the next chapter on Rural Transport and Accessibility .
20 This social bond probably reaches its greatest intensity in the modern nation state , and it will be discussed more fully in the next chapter .
21 Where this has been done in the UK these natural monopolies are called nationalized industries , and we discuss them more fully in the next chapter .
22 We will consider the role of data compression in different contexts more fully in the next chapter .
23 We will deal with optical discs more fully in the next chapter when we examine the technological environment in which multimedia is emerging and , for the moment , will concentrate on gaining some sense of the way in which the use of optical disc information systems is expanding .
24 ( The use of indices is discussed more fully in the next chapter . )
25 This is particularly true in the case of questionnaire data from surveys ( discussed more fully in the next chapter ) .
26 Beveridge , however , studied the German experiment more closely during the next year and concluded that the contributory insurance principle could not only reduce costs ; it could also eliminate reliance on means tests . ’
27 straight up the erm by the custom bridge , right up to the next island round there , round the island and back down again
28 And then you 're straight on to the next job .
29 I thought at first that he was merely taking an open-air path to his own bedroom , but he went straight past the open door at the end of his sleeping car , and straight on past the next car also .
30 ‘ So I 'd have to pay for both lots when I bought them , even if I put one straight back into the next auction ? ’
  Next page