Example sentences of "[verb] through in [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Scots squeeze through in Harp Masters |
2 | Er , there may be one there may have been one that failed , I 'm not sure but they probably did a resit and got through in September . |
3 | Demonstrations and pickets collected at pit gates and shouted abuse at them , as they passed through in coaches . |
4 | You have a dialogue box to go through in order to amend the entry , and you can only get to it by double clicking on the item 's stock code . |
5 | The deal is expected to go through in March after structural checks are complete . |
6 | The force of repression is like a great dam that holds back the raging torrents of the instincts of the unconscious and allows er some of them through , but others break through in holes , and holes and cracks appear which are the unconscious returning as one |
7 | THE divorce came through in April of this year but the couple have remained on friendly terms . |
8 | But he warned that buyers ' foreign-exchange hedging operations meant that it would be the fourth quarter of 1992 before the full impact came through in orders and deliveries . |
9 | In spring , the Head is used by migrants , the bulk of birds passing through in April and May . |
10 | Government by minority is usually bad government ; in no truly democratic country could a disaster like the poll tax have been pushed through in defiance of public opinion , wasting billions of pounds and causing misery to millions of people . |
11 | Radical plans for the railway network will be pushed through in parallel with the continuation of the huge road-building programme . |
12 | Investors in soon-to-mature MTNs could be first in line for payment if the deal with GE Capital can be pushed through in time . |
13 | This does n't show through in practice , though , since under Windows , probably one of the most graphically intensive environments you can have , screen updates are acceptably quick , although not as fast as with Windows-optimized accelerated cards . |
14 | In a similar sort of way , as Fillmore ( 1971b ) notes , the editorial we of , for example , the New Yorker takes plural verb agreement ( thus we are not we am ) , but in the reflexive the underlying singularity shows through in phrases like as for ourself . |
15 | The two views are practical equivalents in most contexts , but the existence of a distinction shows through in cases such as ( 13 ) and ( 14 ) above . |
16 | A thin veneer of cork is bonded of a painted backing shows through in places to create a two-colour finish . |
17 | The Victorian block of flats where Christine Mills lived had been painted a dark green a decade ago and the wood of the frames now showed through in parts , black and rotten . |
18 | I told him that we were leaving the present trail at Reggane and going through In Salah and Tamanrasset . |
19 | To respond effectively , we must understand the purchaser 's strategy and have thought through in advance with the purchaser how best to present its case . |
20 | ‘ Our vote is up in Scotland , our seats are up in Scotland and our argument is getting through in Scotland , ’ he said on Friday . |
21 | His humour constantly breaks through in asides and anecdotes , as does a delightful and mastering smile that transforms his face like Aegean sunlight on a frowning sea . |
22 | It is not the book that you stay up huffing and mewing with laughter over until the middle of the night — that is either Dervla Murphy 's Muddling Through in Madagascar ( Arrow Books , 1990 ) or Sir David Attenborough 's original Zoo Quest to Madagascar , which richly deserves reprinting . |
23 | Most pass through in April and the peak movements are fairly consistently noted in the second half of this month , although they sometimes occur in late March or early May . |
24 | Some of the huge flocks of Scandinavian thrushes ( fieldfare , redwing , and song-thrush mainly ) which pass through in spring and autumn , will enter the traps but the majority will stay out on the hillsides . |
25 | Redshanks , lapwings and shovelers nest and many waders pass through in spring and autumn . |
26 | Rufus was not squeamish , he had not been one of those medical students who become nauseous at their first sight of surgery , but , curiously enough he did not much like to think of all those odd little bones , so alien to him , so unidentifiable , being dug up and sorted out and sifted through in case there should be a human fibula among them or a vertebra . |
27 | Cos my mother worked through in Glasgow as a maid , and — eh — she had me t'a dentist — well he was a university dentist — fae doon the myre . |
28 | All the discussion seems to show that the same attitudes are coming through in society . |
29 | The Althorps ' divorce went through in April 1969 and a month later on May 2 , Peter Shand Kydd and Lady Althorp married in a quiet register office ceremony and bought a house on the West Sussex coast where Peter could indulge his love of sailing . |
30 | He closed his eyes and went through in detail what he would like to do to the curly-haired tart . |