Example sentences of "[adv] [vb infin] [adv] the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 She knows the kinds of places she likes to work , sleep and eat in , and will instinctively seek out the right type of office , hotel , or restaurant .
2 Recommendations were made that would eventually phase out the broad gauge .
3 Do n't entirely rule out the ultimate staging of a joint men 's and women 's event .
4 I do not rightly understand how the medical men could not save him after the accident since you say the cut seemed small and did not appear to trouble him but I have heard that for the blood to be poisoned it takes only a pin-prick and that a cut where there is manure about can have this effect if not noticed .
5 In other words , if one person has double the income of another , the property occupied will not necessarily have twice the rateable value .
6 ‘ The policy of peaceful coexistence … does not only hold back the revolutionary struggle , but promotes its upsurge … the might of the Soviet Union serves as a decisive obstacle in the way of imperialist plans for unleashing a new world war . ’
7 Those of us who were there to witness his quite wretched display against Dundee United in the league in those first few months , and to hear Graeme Souness 's private condemnation of it later , can only realise now the formidable character this player is blessed with .
8 I can only pick up the linguistic crumbs .
9 It was , therefore , with a certain displeasure , that I received , one Friday evening , Nigel 's announcement that he had been sent details of a converted mill in Wales and we 'd better drive up the next morning to take a look at it .
10 I can only point out the immoral lifestyle that accompanied his profession and the evidence of spiritual deceit .
11 A sociology of the unconscious would not only point out the unintended consequences of social action , where these are grasped and comprehended in terms of conscious intentions which are then misunderstood , or reinterpreted , by other groups within the social relationships , and which result in outcomes which neither the original intender nor the others could have foreseen .
12 The actual workload of doctors does not necessarily reflect accurately the potential demand for their services , as unmet need is not taken into account .
13 Another issue , which commentators are keen to see debated widely , is the question of whether the Institute can effectively carry out the dual roles of protecting the interests of both the public and its members .
14 New occasions of conflict were now appearing and would eventually break up the long peace , and as this became clearer so did the essentially competitive nature of the European system .
15 It seems that many people , perhaps without even thinking about it , would rather do down the other player than cooperate with the other player to do down the banker .
16 But we have nothing against foreign investment in British companies , and I can not think why the Hon. Gentleman should take that line .
17 Ronni wished an entire treeload of acacia blossom would fall on her if she could just experience again the thrilling touch of that hand .
18 I WAS delighted that Newcastle City Council leader Jeremy Beecham will not bail out the ailing Newcastle United FC ( Echo Jan 15 ) .
19 Reports in mid-October suggested , however , that US and United Kingdom investigators still believed that the new evidence did not rule out the original assumption that the attack had been ordered by Iran and Syria in revenge for the accidental shooting down in July 1988 in the Gulf of an Iranian airbus by the USS Vincennes , when 290 people were killed [ see pp. 36169-70 ; 37898 ] .
20 It even had a name , he could just make out the tiny print .
21 As he gazed out , down the enormous length of the ship , he could just make out the dark outline against the lighter sea , and the rectangular shapes of the deck-covered containers .
22 Between the ranks of bared heads ( one or another of which would occasionally turn to take a quick glance of inspection at his own face ) he could just make out the graceful figure of Mrs Wright herself , kneeling on a hassock in front of the table .
23 Straining his eyes , he could just make out the two boxes which were stacked in the far corner of the room and a picture frame which was propped up against them .
24 He could just make out the two rows of cottages and the fields beyond them .
25 To her right , as her eyes adjusted to the faint lifting of the darkness , she could just make out the first steps of the spiral tower staircase .
26 By peering hard in the same direction , I could just make out the faint flicker of a distant plane .
27 Yes , through the gloom she could just make out the dried-up fountain in the middle of it , and , straight ahead , the huge studded doors of a church .
28 He lifted his head and , in the semi-darkness , she could just make out the wry smile that touched the corners of his mouth .
29 Through the middle kitchen window he could just make out the open gate , the wooden ramp covering the steps and the first huge saddle-back sow ambling down into the yard .
30 It was clear enough for Gareth to just make out the gaunt shapes of the drilling platforms on the north-eastern horizon .
  Next page