Example sentences of "[modal v] [vb infin] [adv] through the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Unfortunately , puppies in particular may rush out through the door in this situation , often ignoring the visitor , and could end up on the road .
2 They must walk out through the camp gate and cross the road and the railway line and then the file will enter the compound of the Factory .
3 We therefore feel it is absolutely vital that if there is to be a new settlement , it should come forward through the structure plan .
4 It seemed improbable that the fine hot weather should continue right through the summer , but so it did for most of us .
5 If the house is semi-detached or terraced , the party walls must continue up through the roof space to form a fire and smoke barrier between the properties ( see Chapter 5 ) .
6 We 're discussing this morning , and I 'll run briefly through the subjects that we have been discussing this morning for the er , new listeners .
7 The power that older people might have collectively through the ballot box is not exercised .
8 We 'll go straight through the presentations , and then there is an opportunity , obviously for you to ask questions or , and to join in generally discussion .
9 Erm only part of it will burn and it 'll go out through the exhaust , the
10 Right , we 'll go up this way , through the promena along the promenade , and then we 'll go back through the town and it 'll be time to get the others from school by then .
11 Oh we 'll get in through the window then , that 'll be a laugh .
12 " No , John , they 'll come up through the front , " said Fielding , his arm on my shoulder now as he steered me across the floor .
13 In other cases , the eye-concealing lines are horizontal stripes , or a single diagonal line may run up through the eye and end on top of the head .
14 Trucks would come hurtling down the hill , their brakes would fail , and they 'd plough right through the wall and on into the field beyond .
15 It was n't a slum terrace , as she had expected , but from what she could make out through the moonlight they were good working-class houses , each with its small rectangle of iron-railed garden in front .
16 If he could root back through the maze of moment and incident , would he find premonitory signs sticking out like dire figurations of chicken entrails ?
17 I knocked on it but it was so dilapidated that I could see right through the door frame and into a large room where a man was sitting in a kitchen chair , dressed in trousers and vest .
18 Jessamyn could see right through the hole in the dead man .
19 Cawthorne was leaning over the machine , blocking my view of anything else inside the bunker , and I slid around to check whether I could see in through the slits .
20 ‘ I thought we could move up through the shop , better ourselves .
21 When the wind was south-westerly , and it usually was , they made the hearth at the north end of the house so that the smoke could filter out through the stones .
22 With a dado rail you would hang all of one type first , but we did n't do this as we needed both pieces wet so we could cut right through the overlap point with a sharp knife and remove both pieces of waste to leave a perfect butt joint .
23 I 'd go down through the choir practice room and St Andrew 's chapel beneath it , make a quick call at the sacristy ( where Holy Harding does his serving ) , then cross the quire to the south side , where , with the help of the Talisman of Shag , I would enter the-spiral stair at ground level , and so — relicless but , hopefully , bearing precious manna for the invalid — to the Sanatorium ( formerly known as the Wheel Room ) and , after that , bed .
24 She 'd go in through the back .
25 The longer this persisted , the hotter the planet got , because energy from the Sun could penetrate down through the clouds but was incapable of escaping back out through them ( the famous ‘ greenhouse effect ’ ) .
26 While one may whizz straight through the enemy , and another might stall in front of your Mob , the other one is bound to end up somewhere where you want him .
27 Bias may creep in through the wording of questions ( which may be ambiguous , unintelligible or suggestive of a particular answer ) , through the careless recording of answers , through the interviewer 's ( perhaps unwitting ) influence over response-patterns and through a general failure of the interviewer to establish the kind of rapport with the respondent that enables him or her to give truthful answers on personal matters .
28 He would stay on through the night although the local doctor had said it was probably useless .
29 Now it would be a question of building up contacts again , putting up a case which would percolate up through the echelons of power , hopefully gathering momentum and authenticity as it did so .
30 The gigantically helmeted head of some biblical hero would stick out through the roof and stand like an Easter Island monolith among the chimneys and machine-gun emplacements , jewelled eyes blazing with golem life .
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