Example sentences of "[adv] [adv prt] [prep] the [noun] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The grenade dropped right on to the cab floor in front of Rex .
2 They mounted the slight slope and , turning right on to the Westport road , walked towards the village .
3 And e what I 'd put on what I 'd said to her Erm I think I 'd put on here , you know , Re refer to section five on on of the brainstorm list , and she 'd all she 'd typed in is , Where is section five of the brainstorm list , I could n't could n't find .
4 She pulled Midnight 's head up off the grass , gathered him together and drew him delicately on to the garden path .
5 It was probably whilst flying high over an approaching enemy that one Goblin got a bit carried away , and steering himself as best as he could with his crude wings , crashed right down onto the enemy army .
6 Right down to the question mark at the end of their name , right ?
7 Sam said , frowning , ‘ You ca n't have dived out under the curtain , it goes right down to the river bed . ’
8 You saw right down to the Goya funeral grin
9 Before spawning in this artfully arranged cave , this pair of C. labiatum had cleared right down to the undergravel plate .
10 Its jet of steam neutralises the oils and greases on the carpet fibres , right down to the carpet base .
11 Very well , but then let us go right down to the south-west corner of the United States and lock at the Moenkopi and associated formations of Arizona .
12 Well if you did n't there 'd be so much change on the bail that they all start to fall off and there 'd be all one big muddle cos that and as chain coming down that used to come right down into the chain locker to the bottom of the ships .
13 round the barrel about three times round the barrel then right down into the chain locker but if you kept , let it ride what we used to call let it ride well well now it get so big then you have to run it all off cos you had one lever , that 's what you had and the steam valve could have all steamed .
14 Both of them got out on the restaurant floor , but Pavel carried on down to the entrance lobby .
15 No that 's only on at the weekends darling
16 They sank down on to the leopardette sofa and he slipped off the crisp lacy briefs .
17 He had remembered having seen , that first day , some goats grazing further on down the river bank , had made some inquiries and discovered that they were taken down on to the river bed every morning by a boy who acted as herd .
18 Passengers poked their heads out of the doors like rabbits testing the wind and , deciding it was safe , hopped down on to the station platform where a sign read : " Cook , Queen of the Nullarbor .
19 Alexandra suddenly found she was crying , great gulping sobs , tears splashing down on to the kitchen counter , an aching sense of something very precious which she had discarded without even a second glance .
20 The Warlord toppled backwards — slowly at first , then avalanching down on to the vitrodur surface .
21 And flops back down on to the car seat .
22 Obviously the way it tumbled — nay , cascaded — down on to the Gyggle chest had close associations with those prophetic beards that lingered in my memory from many hours of tilted observation in cathedrals and museums , yet something about the beard 's rigidity , its apparent inflexibility , said Assyria , Sumeria .
23 Come straight down on to the concrete floor .
24 As you go deeper in towards the centre laboratory you pass through progressively cleaner bio-medical zones , starting here with a shower .
25 Yea o Yes er there was no clutch , only something you could erm it was sort of a forked iron er over the strap , and then you had a a long plank in in above the chaff cutter , that was the most dangerous thing .
26 The tide was rising : it came filtering gently in through the salt-marsh vegetation , washing up the beach and receding , leaving ribbons of foam along the sand .
27 1 Peel the pears and rub them all over with the cut side of the lemon .
28 Teague 's career looked all over after the world cup final … but he 's beaten off a shoulder injury and is back at his best … so too is Oxfordshire jockey Richard Dunwoody he rode five winners on saturday … today he won again on the Nicholson trained Now Your Talkin … he 's the top jockey with 40 winners … now he 's talkin … the Williams team from Didcot do n't do a lot of talking apart from Nigel of course but they 've swept the board in formula one this season …
29 Perhaps he might he better off in the works office ?
30 You would be better off in the personnel department .
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