Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] the [adj] [noun] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 Evergreen winter foliage needs to stay looking fresh right through the darkest days and some variegated plants are better at this than others .
2 We generally sleep right through the early morning if it 's rough weather .
3 New towns continued to be founded right through the medieval period though after the early thirteenth century the changing economic conditions were no longer ideal for their development and the process tailed oft Queenborough , Kent ( 1368 ) is said to be the latest medieval planned town , though Bewdley , Worcestershire ( soon after 1477 ) , is probably the last one .
4 It can occur much earlier , but the peak danger period for the disease generally begins from the early part of July , and may persist right through the growing season until the big temperature drops of late autumn upset it .
5 However , despite the growing interest in this field of study , there has been no examination of this social group right through the late-medieval period and many aspects of its history remain problematic , even barely explored .
6 Thereafter , there is a steady decline of interest in science and this disillusionment extends right through the secondary-school years and into the undergraduate period .
7 Had he succeeded , Sartre would have established dialectical reason as successfully for the human sciences as Kant had established analytical reason for natural science .
8 The Ring of Eight was originally founded to dance at Christchurch Folk Festival but as well as dancing at festivals we also travel to craft fairs around the South of England and perform locally for the National Trust and other charities .
9 Damping with the VCID is achieved by transferring the system 's mechanical energy to at , d fro between the damper housing and rotor using an inefficient method of coupling ( the viscous fluid ) , so that some of the energy is dissipated with each transfer .
10 Somewhere between the best case and the worst case we suppose the actual future to lie .
11 Despair overtakes me as soon as I see the dreaded trolleys jammed together ; I always manage to pick one with a crab-like action ; my heart sinks and culinary amnesia sets in somewhere between the tinned fruit and dried pasta .
12 Just somehow , somewhere between the sweet shop and her house , between home and school , between tea-time and bath-time , she would lose concentration .
13 On a scale of user friendliness and acceptability , major success in consumer multimedia must lie somewhere between the electric kettle and the television set .
14 Their lolloping sound occupies an area somewhere between The Mock Turtles and James , with David Ashmore 's husky vocal style uncomfortably close to that of Tim Booth .
15 We aimed to be somewhere between the Daily Mirror and the Daily Mail .
16 LeBas , commenting on the problem posed by the need to support arguments in papers by reference to large sets of analytical geochemical data , mentions the BLDSC ‘ Supplementary Publication ’ programme as an intermediate data collection somewhere between the conventional journal and the large , national , source ( non-bibliographic ) databases .
17 The effect of suppression , wherever it occurs , is that stimuli presented to the left ear are destined predominantly for the right hemisphere and stimuli heard at the right ear arrive mainly in the left hemisphere .
18 She held the lead and quietly plodded upward through the crisp snow that covered the long Baskan Glacier .
19 The exhibition continues into twentieth-century painting with works of Futurism , the Cubist-Futurist Russians , American Cubism , Precisionism represented by Charles Demuth and Charles Sheeler and thence on through the various transformations that the art of this century has seen .
20 He urged them on through the mounting waves until they too reached the Rebecca , and he was able to ram one hole , fill it with pitch , then another , and another , round the hull beneath the overhang of the bows , in a rain of missiles , with fire sizzling around him , and his fellow fighters hanging on , hoping for the moment when the timbers would be ablaze .
21 ‘ Do n't worry , ’ he said , skipping on through the amateur boxing and back around to the broadcast channels again .
22 1982 ) , monogamous males might be expected to compete as intensely for the best mates or territories as do polygynous males for the biggest harems .
23 Boyd Orr 's malnourished population was drawn almost entirely from this section of the working class and it was their lives which changed little during the inter-war years as Carl Chinn , and other writers have noted .
24 I wan na say on that question we were talking about earlier on about the young people and some facilities for them .
25 The authority had coincidentally tested the water for toxins on about the same day as the officer cadets had used it .
26 I 'm just a little bit concerned that if we do delay it while discussions are going on about the unitary authorities and such like , we 'll put restrictions on Mr running it as a commercial enterprise , and I think we have got to make sure that any long term deferral on this , we do n't inhibit him rationalising selling off the odd cottage and this sort of thing , and the farmhouse as we go along , and amalgamating ones because I think it 's , he 's got to be able to run it as a commercial proposition during the course of deliberations .
27 Frank what about this argument that 's going on about the free kick that was disallowed ?
28 We have a joint planning officer , and we 've got quite a lot of joint erm of joint planning going on between the voluntary sector and the Health Authority and the Social Services .
29 Sin and sex do somehow go together and this seems to tie in with the distinction I made much earlier on between the scientific view that man differs from other animals only in degree and the religious view that there is an essential difference in kind .
30 Stories have been rejected outright for the simple reason that they were ‘ too middle-class ’ , though one editor was constructive enough to suggest the writer might want to replace ballet and riding classes with swimming and gymnastics .
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