Example sentences of "[adv] [vb base] [adv] [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | Suddenly it 's all there , complete with toilet paper , which you use and then deftly wind back on to the roll . |
2 | but they only go over once in the Grand National . |
3 | Let them govern , not sit comfortably back with the occasional ‘ tut tut ’ after the event . |
4 | And while we were talking about Brighton ( away back up there in the message ) , god is nt Brightons kit crap ? |
5 | ‘ When he 's finished his tale , just bed down here in the hall . |
6 | not get up early in the morning ? |
7 | The continents just drift around passively on the backs of the mantle convection cells , like great rafts , with the ‘ leading ’ edges of the rafts being dragged down and thickened where they encounter descending oceanic crust . |
8 | Let's have a look first all er just step back slightly to the time when the sales exec goes round to sign up the estate agent . |
9 | The two upper parts and two lower ones separate and finally join together only at the words ‘ could say ’ . |
10 | ( To ROS and GUIL ) They 're a bit out of practice , but they always pick up wonderfully for the deaths — it brings out the poetry in them . |
11 | It is also the case that people who live with financial anxieties , poor health , and insecurity of employment income and accommodation are rarely happy and usually suffer not only from the actual privations of poverty or homelessness but also from a demoralizing sense of failure . |
12 | Even if these animals eat the same restricted amount every day , they still grow more rapidly in the summer than in the winter . |
13 | I hope that the proposed union will receive more support not only from the Government but from the House , because not having a monopoly union in the prison service must be healthy , especially if the monopoly union brings about so many disputes . |
14 | Like ordinary people in general , old people usually show up vividly in the record only when they become a problem . |
15 | If she could get there before the long closure for lunch-hour he would make her up a preparation , and Peony could get it back to her mother and possibly get back again to the harbour for the Swimming Gala . |
16 | Those people always get on better in the world than decent men . ’ |
17 | On the other hand an LM ‘ wave ’ is much smaller and by its nature causes much less turbulence but frequent repetition means that its wavelets still penetrate as far into the being of the patient . |
18 | The horses always go much better on the second day , which makes the long journey seem worthwhile . |
19 | ‘ Well , we are down-to one box and they always go very well in the winter ; anything with liquorice in , like that . ’ |
20 | Things usually turn out right in the end . ’ |
21 | The guitars always end up loud in the mix and obliterate everything else . |
22 | They still feature less prominently in the portfolios of private investors in the UK than , for instance , on the continent or in the US , but they are becoming increasingly popular here too . |
23 | On other JAR matters , the Library staff restructuring has pushed a lot more work down on to the front desk staff , and I 'm sure that the effects will be noticed in future . |
24 | Right get up back on the stool then . |
25 | We also work very closely with the Federation of Sussex Industries , and they will be having one of their monthly meetings at the University in November , and we also hope to organise a joint open day with the F S I next June or July . |
26 | That was attached to for the July Course the Jockey Club runs a long way right near round on to the Swaffham Road , yeah see runs right up , right up to the Swaffham Road , you see . |
27 | Although originally intended for the trade , most of these now sell quite happily to the home handyman . |
28 | Whereas the same horses often travel quite happily in the ordinary , well-lighted , double horse trailers drawn by a car . |
29 | Surveys carried out by professional surveyors really begin too late in the house-buying process , and are divorced from the circumstances of the purchaser and from the legal provisions contained in the deeds and conveyance . |
30 | We now look more closely at the absentees in relation to two factors ; gender and school stage . |