Example sentences of "[adv] [to-vb] [adv] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The Red crew gained a length by the mile post and 2 ½ by Hammersmith Bridge , but the freshmen hung on to lose by about the same margin , six seconds behind Red Alligator 's winning time of 19min 46sec .
2 Three times through the winter , Cascade had been within days of being fully formed , only to fall down at the last minute .
3 BARRY LANE produced a best-of-the-week 66 to come from eight behind to force a tie with Jose-Maria Canizares ( 74 ) in the Rome Masters at windswept Castelgandolfo yesterday , only to lose out at the fourth play-off hole .
4 Then another gap , just six months , before he got a barmaid from Ipswich who 'd been visiting her granny and was daft enough to wait alone for the late bus .
5 Perhaps Jeremy Bates , who with his partner , Neil Broad , were ranked sufficiently highly to go straight into the main draw for the doubles , might have considered the position of his partner a little more sympathetically .
6 Such is the experience of most of us when we go to bed late : we might sleep slightly later than usual but rarely long enough to compensate completely for the late night .
7 Very soon , they eat enough to pass on to the next stage of their life cycle .
8 ‘ If you 'd be kind enough to come down to the front door , I 'll explain everything . ’
9 He was too alert not to catch the look and he was swift enough to look down in the same instant at his cup .
10 Like most Chinese children unfortunate enough to grow up in the Sixties , Zeng 's education was severely disrupted by the Cultural Revolution , and he had to sit through the shouting matches and brain-washing sessions just as everyone else did .
11 ‘ We have only to put together in the right way what we know without adding anything , and the satisfaction we are trying to get from the explanation comes of itself . ’
12 Manuel had quietly melted away , perhaps to leave the stage clear for Andy , perhaps to grieve alone at the cruel injustice that had robbed him of the top prize .
13 If the heat is put on one shareholder , he , she or it can simply sell to the individual intended all along to emerge eventually with the key stake .
14 He has a tendency to give abstract theory in unnecessarily dense language without examples ; this is difficult to absorb , and consequently , when we reach the extended analyses in Chapter 5 , there is a temptation constantly to flick back to the earlier chapters to try to clarify the theory .
15 KERRY Matthew ran the race of her life on Saturday only to finish agonisingly outside the English Schools Championships qualifying time .
16 She leaned down to check closely upon the steady rise and fall of his chest , and the slight , rhythmic warmth of the air expelled from his lungs .
17 He was n't strong enough to get on to the par-5s in two for eagle chances , so he just chipped and putted for birdies .
18 The probability is low for it to move a long distance at more than the speed of light , but it can go faster than light for just far enough to get out of the black hole , and then go slower than light .
19 It would be ironic to pick away at the mortar for a few decades only to break through into the next-door cell .
20 If only to get on to the practical arrangements . ’
21 So to get back to the serious matter Mr Mayor if I may .
22 Delicate creamy-yellow ‘ E P Bowles ’ stays open just long enough to contrast beautifully with the pale mauve flowers and bright orange stamens of Crocus tommasinianus .
23 By now you will have stimulated the circulation enough to move on to the next stage , which is kneading .
24 The architect , Bogdan Bogdanovic , whose entire career has been devoted to the tragic commemoration of war victims , is one of the very few Serbians brave enough to speak out against the current Serbian aggression .
25 But that one painted notice is not enough to make up for the shabby doors , scruffy brickwork , and grimy frosted glass .
26 A concrete breakwater stretches away to sink slowly in the dark distance .
27 It had been glorious just to sit there at the huge dining table , with the sounds of the sea wafting up through the open window , feeling her exhaustion slip away from her , while the energetic Mrs Birkin set before the three of them course after delicious course .
28 The musky male scent of his cologne teased her nostrils , and she was ashamed at the way her knees were trembling as he led her over to sit down on the wide , comfortable couch .
29 The answer is not to fall back on the offensive utilisation of a harmless birthday , but to write into constitutions strict regulations about terms of appointment .
30 Companies cluster together anxious not to miss out on the latest developments and the growing pool of scientifically-skilled labour .
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