Example sentences of "[adv] [vb base] [adv] to [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Sweetman turned a furious smeared face at us , then drove his garish boat hard at Wavebreaker 's hull to gouge a long scratch down to the bare metal .
2 Here you can sit in an arch-lined square , shop for the region 's wonderful food and wine , wander the Saturday market , or perhaps walk up to the medieval hilltop castle and village of Montefioralle where the views stretch forever .
3 As soon as they sight a predator approaching , they swiftly dart round to the far side of a tree-trunk before performing the rigid ‘ statue ’ response .
4 These remarkable flies with wasp-like markings hang motionless in the air — hence the name of hover fly — and suddenly shoot off to a different position ; their flight is a series of sudden darting movements .
5 Surrounded by extensive and enclosed grounds it is perfect for children who can play in complete freedom while their elders relax on the lawns that gently slope down to an attractive swimming pool .
6 These incidents scarcely add up to a coherent narrative , and the chronology is uncertain .
7 And whether it 's electronics or physics or maths or anything else , erm when you get to the point where you 're dividing by zero , you have to say well now we leave the , the mathematical model , and we just go back to the common sense model .
8 Now equally of course organization can stultify progress , enmesh teachers and students alike in a nightmare of regulations and restrictions , tie up materials and equipment that could otherwise be productively used , and generally contribute more to the personal empires of individuals than to liberation of either teachers or students .
9 They always look back to the old smokestack industries .
10 If we are to consider effective follow-up of the family concerned as an equally desirable function for the church to perform , then we very quickly face up to a major logistical exercise .
11 Animals still travel up to the high pastures , but today the migration is by truck , and not on foot .
12 Well I think I , I mean I do agree and I think that the that er that pressure is now getting on to these , these city institutions , but erm , but I still come back to the basic thing that , that really , you know what appears to me is happening is we 've we 're having literally millions of pounds taken out in , in issuing these massive massive writs you know , a hundred and seventy eight page writs are sort of being and really the money for those is coming out of the remaining money in our pension funds and really I feel that what wou what is happening is this , as far as I 'm concerned , is all due to the self-regulatory body being set under the Financial Services Act , and in a way I feel that you know we 're being made to pay for sorting out a mess that somebody else is making .
13 The candidate will start with one version of the law and then gradually veer round to a contradictory version — thus making sure that the right rule is there somewhere , even though he can not pick it out .
14 That 's good news for Britain as long as we ensure that we never , ever sign up to the social chapter with its job destroying er job destroying characteristics .
15 It says right get on to a new line .
16 Similarly , some couples assiduously hang on to a sexual problem as a defence against facing up to a much wider problem in their marriage .
17 The Sicilian tyrants also look backwards to the archaic age of mainland Greece : Gelon 's appeal to the Syracusan populace is demagogy of a kind that recalls Pisistratus , as does Dionysius ' demand for a bodyguard .
18 I 'm only gon na get it four foot deep with it anyway it would n't be four foot deep all over , it 'll start off at two foot and then slightly slope down to the deep part
19 Some languages are peculiar to one region , yet intimately related to others beyond — like the 500 or so Austronesian tongues which not only link speakers in Vietnam and Cambodia with those in Fiji , Malaysia , the Philippines , Sulawesi and Borneo , but also reach out to the inland mountains of Taiwan , the North Island of New Zealand , and to the speakers of Dobu in the d'Entrecasteaux islands and of Trukese on Truk .
20 ‘ We now look forward to the main course this evening . ’
21 and and I mean I I often refer back to the annual reports .
22 Now go upstairs to the Mathematical Hall by K. I. Dientzenhofer , where there are good Rococo tables and a collection of clocks made in the Clementinum .
23 Environmental issues now contribute much to an ever-increasing awareness of the overwork of the land and the pollution of the countryside .
24 Colleagues , I now come back to the special report and will take speakers from the regions .
25 From here climb up to a large thread belay and cave stance .
26 I think secondly erm whichever country , and you do look back to your roots , and we for better or for worse here look back to the great public school headmaster of a century ago and I still think people want that kind of dynamic drive , that entrepreneurial drive , and who 's to say they 're wrong ?
27 And er he would n't tell me what the message was you see , he would just say , Well go across to the other yard and shunt out a couple of coaches you see .
28 The exercises followed a pattern , a dimly remembered copy of the Kurgan haiku — a two-handed reach skyward to the left , and then to the right , a reverse , two-handed , and then the single-handed moves .
29 It is perhaps significant , in this opening paragraph , that the sentences move to a peak of length in sentence ( 4 ) , and thence slope down to the final brevity of ( 7 ) .
30 So take your time to learn the phrasing , start off slowly and then build gradually to the written tempo in each case .
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