Example sentences of "[modal v] [adv] [verb] [adv] [adv] [verb] " in BNC.

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1 Having settled the tripartite and integrated structure of our students ’ training needs , we should perhaps consider how best to provide for them .
2 Mr Yeltsin must now decide how best to exploit this rift in the parliamentary leadership .
3 From this point you must then decide how far to push the delegated task down the organizational hierarchy .
4 Between waking and full consciousness I see clearly that I should never have so casually left the inn once I had got there , taking it for granted I could get back quite simply .
5 So instead of pushing pushing pushing , let's just see how much comes more or less naturally through advertising .
6 Yeah perhaps she 's got a mutual agreement that they 'll just end up perhaps getting married , I do n't know
7 Bill , there there 'll be a tiny wee spot of water down at the bottom here Bill that 'll maybe take today just to dissolve away .
8 Although an operation on his upper jaw at Leicester Infirmary in about 1882 had removed most of the bony ‘ trunk ’ protruding from his mouth , his appearance was so repulsive that he could only go outside heavily disguised in a long black cloak , a peaked cap , and a mask .
9 And it really is n't eas it really is n't difficult to keep up to date er once you 've got the background because although income tax does change it only changes annually , it may well change more frequently changes annually .
10 Although this would hardly seem fast enough to catch prey , the smaller reptilian and amphibious animals would also have run at similarly slower speeds .
11 But there is budget in the testing resource budget to be able to accommodate for cover we would then decide how best to handle that .
12 The pair of pals would sometimes pop out together to buy bread and newspapers .
13 Such hypothetical ‘ heavy ’ ice would therefore take much longer to melt than real ice does .
14 Similarly , a blouse which is purchased from a shop as an alienable commodity may then become so intimately associated with a particular individual that it may not even be borrowed by a sibling , After some time , however , the object may lose this close association , becoming , as jumble , an alienable commodity once again .
15 FACING PAGE Many dogs will instinctively jump up either to seize a toy or as a greeting .
16 It will all depend how long has he owed them it .
17 Beware of swing sequences that show the late hit of the hands , as illustrated in Diagram A. This position at halfway in the downswing may be ideal for the skilled or powerful player , because the hands and lower arms will still release early enough to return the clubface squarely to the back of the ball .
18 ‘ But when he ca n't carry you any longer , I do hope you will still come up here to visit us . ’
19 Coal imports will also increase considerably probably reaching some 20% of demand by the year 2000 .
20 Despite Berkeley 's claim that ‘ we do at all times and in all places perceive manifest tokens of the divinity ’ , the important place occupied by God in his philosophy will inevitably seem as far removed from immediate experience as the material world of seventeenth-century philosophy seemed to Berkeley .
21 I have made a clear commitment to the House today that , because of representations from Members on both sides of the House , the renewable energy advisory group will fully assess how best to develop renewable energy from Scotland .
22 We will certainly need very soon to reconsider the levels of subscriptions paid by the employed Bar in comparison with those paid by those in private practice .
23 Parent companies can thereby keep under tight control the capital they have tied up in idle stocks and make substantial savings on fixed outlay in storage or warehousing .
24 The reviewer is likely to get hot under the collar if a personal favourite has been left out and can easily end up merely drawing up a rival selection .
25 ‘ I can hardly believe so much came from just two schools — I hate to think what is lying in basements around the country , ’ Alistair said .
26 ‘ It says something for the civilising effect of our upbringing that we can both sit here calmly sharing a meal together when we freely admit to the same deep-seated and violent antipathy . ’
27 They have removed the attack on our conference and at last we can now get on together to build a better union .
28 We have a standard for children which assumes they can either send very strongly amplifies the distress , and therefore , we are not going to taken them terribly seriously , or at least they can actual reach much higher intensities before we do take them seriously , whereas for adults we have a different standard which , which assumes that even slight expressions of distress in adult could be serious .
29 When I go abroad on holiday , I think : I 'm here for two weeks , I can either sit here fully dressed for a whole fortnight , or I can take my leg off and jump in the pool .
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