Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [verb] [prep] [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Right right look at the pictures then do n't okay stop thinking of hydrochloric acid , think of H C L.
2 The attempt of the Communist Party to implement Comintern decisions naturally gave rise to the most widely publicized of the movements for some kind of co-operation on the Left .
3 The point , therefore , is to validate Marxism , to show that it is not simply a method of interpretation , nor even that it is the best method of interpretation that can most successfully account for the facts and the course of history , but to prove a priori that history works according to dialectical structures , and to demonstrate ‘ the moments of their inter-relations , the ever vaster and more complex movement which totalises them and , finally , the very direction of the totalization , that is to say , the ‘ meaning of History ’ and its Truth , ( I , 69 ) .
4 Part of the burden was thereby eventually eliminated as the prices of advanced countries ' exports to the primary producers rose — reducing the deterioration in the terms of trade .
5 Two of the younger ones rather shyly explained about the workings of the creamery .
6 It would sometimes help if that normalcy were a little better portrayed by the likes of such as the BBC and by those journalists who earn their living by reporting only violence .
7 Erm right so looking at the details of those , right what we 've , what we 're actually saying then is that if erm you , you would want to provide that income or want to make sure that that , that income was available should you die tomorrow ?
8 The hall church is only rarely found outside the realms of Germanic influence .
9 Radio was only rarely mentioned in the columns of the daily press .
10 However , temporal order was only rarely mentioned in the children 's explanations of their judgements , indicating that children may not be particularly aware of the temporal order information on which they base their judgements .
11 Their votes will be vital if seats long since lost to the Conservatives are to be regained .
12 The receipts from his shows have long since moved from the realms of the fantastic into those of the ludicrous .
13 The obelisk was nearly completed , and a place had been prepared for it near the south pylon of the Temple of Ptah ; the barge which had brought it had long since returned to the quarries upriver .
14 For example , the perceived colours of objects are only loosely related to the wavelengths of light that they reflect into our eyes .
15 He was all right going up the stairs till half-way .
16 ‘ You 'd never keep Jupe awake long enough to listen to the arguments .
17 Though not in the ERM , its currency was pegged to it and in September Sweden toughed out wild currency markets by whacking its interest rates sky-high for just long enough to scare off the cowboys .
18 Kate , a poor little rich girl with her own private rink , can barely keep a partner long enough to get to the Olympics , let alone win a gold medal .
19 First , all the evidence that is available shows that the expansion of the social services did not so much rely on the workers made redundant from the industrial sector but rather it drew on new sources of labour — mainly women .
20 It is clear that despite the continuing success and positive feedback from the Programme the difficulties of organisation hinder a much better sharing between the Regions .
21 If this was not possible , then they had to be placed as ‘ hands ’ on conventional farms where they were close enough together to meet in the evenings with their Madrichim ( group counsellors ) for cultural communion .
22 In the past decade the discussion of broadcasting , for so long centred on the peculiarities of ‘ FrancoFrench ’ in fighting within the hexagon , has increasingly encompassed destabilising international factors .
23 These are perhaps best illustrated by the workmen who , for example , seem to be incapable of doing anything without 20-minute tea breaks , management which seems uninterested in providing proper supervision , or boards which seem more interested in finding ways of jacking up their remuneration package irrespective of performance , or complaining to Government about interest rates , rather than wondering why they are not making some of the flood of goods which our continental competitors find it profitable to sell to the UK .
24 This is a majestic breed indeed , but one perhaps best left to the experts .
25 As he grows older he is naturally nearer to the world outside school ; he is ready to demand a good reason for doing whatever he is asked to do ; and he is extremely easily distracted by the problems and dramas of his own life and hard times .
26 Well , time moves on and Maxwell rose from the ashes of this setback , but it is remarkable that the telling verdict of the DTI inquiry should have been so utterly dismissed by the risk-assessors of so many banks .
27 He considered : surely things were n't so utterly disorganised in the kitchens that the scullions no longer knew who was in charge of them , or where his office was ?
28 Wordsworth had some idea of what was going on , as he had prepared himself for this second visit by reading pamphlets , and probably had a letter of introduction to Brissot ; but at first he was only sentimentally affected by the ideals of the Revolution .
29 One was the common ostrich ; the other was the smaller ‘ petise ’ version that Darwin had only just snatched from the jaws of his shipmates .
30 The best tool for this is a circular saw set so that the blade only just protrudes beneath the floorboards — beware of electric cables below !
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