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

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1 However , by delegating authority to subordinates , the superior takes on the extra tasks of calling the subordinates to account for their decisions and performance , and also of coordinating the efforts of different subordinates .
2 He may simply not have had enough money to take on the extra land and the work as required for it .
3 Production is being doubled from 300 to 600 cars a week to meet the growing demand and Rover needs the extra staff to take on the extra shifts .
4 In the late 1950s , however , his Office was still very small and not equipped to take on the extra load .
5 Not a happy marriage , and not one that could take on the extra burden of a weeping widowed friend .
6 If we 're confident that you can afford to take on the extra commitment , we 're quite happy to agree a second loan .
7 Employers could not pass on the extra costs to the consumers either at home or abroad because of international competition — British goods would have been even more expensive than foreign goods .
8 The four RJ-45 connections can be configured so that the unused wires carry an additional four 10BaseT connections by using the MiLAN MIL 4084 Expansion Module or by punching down the extra lines .
9 Ditchburn covered up the extra payments through a hugely inflated figure for the purchase of straw to protect the turf from frost .
10 The Socialist leader took charge of the mandate after the conservative New Democracy Party , which fell three seats short of an overall majority in the general elections last weekend , failed to drum up the extra support it needed to create a minority administration .
11 Once Eurotunnel and Transmanche Link , the consortium of firms building the tunnel , had produced more precise figures detailing the projected cost over-runs , the banks would be more willing to stump up the extra money , raising borrowing costs if necessary , he added .
12 No harm in picking up the extra dough , so long as I was doing my client 's work at the same time . ’
13 Mr Fallon was told some forces in previous years have not been able to take up the extra posts , which have then been redistributed to other places .
14 Only Forster and Silk followed , Lawton staying to assist Nell bring up the extra combat kit that they would now recover from the assault boat .
15 It decided it could squeeze in a fifth , but there is no room for a sixth channel and by the time you add up the extra transmission channels needed for relaying the signal onwards , there will not be enough spectrum to allow the fifth channel to cover the whole country .
16 You can now start venturing away from your measured route and start looking for additional ways to clock up the extra miles — try walking to the shops instead of driving ; try parking the car further away from work and walking the rest of the way ; or getting off the bus or train one or two stops from your destination and walking the rest of the way .
17 When we get up , the weight of our bodies compresses these discs and squeezes out the extra fluid .
18 Separate offences for cases involving police-officers and children would be retained , to mark out the extra heinousness of such crimes in general .
19 I 'll sort out the extra money with your agent . ’
20 And Otis is relieved that he did take out the extra cover , because , in September in 1989 , just five months after he bought the car , he had an accident .
21 And then , you can always take out the extra insurance with er , no but it is n't very much for a tumble-drier , for five years and there 's no problems that way .
22 That tended to balance out the extra income from the milk collection and the wartime subsidies , so we never really achieved the desirable state of feeling well off .
23 Dig out the extra soil needed for construction materials then proceed with installation
24 Although the latter 's earnings fell its dividend is handsomely covered , while a company like Rentokil is growing so healthily that it can afford to pay out the extra £1 million that its generosity has cost .
25 Here , you should point out the extra costs involved in putting furniture into storage and moving into temporary accommodation , although these may be offset by the interest yielded from the temporary investment of the proceeds of sale .
26 Will he also use this opportunity to give a categorical pledge that under no circumstances will he lift the ceiling on national insurance contributions , because that would , in effect , claw back the extra pay that teachers gained yesterday ?
27 It would be wrong to add back the extra depreciation charge that Shaw plc has borne .
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