Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adv prt] [prep] [art] [noun pl] [prep] " in BNC.

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31 Follow the track for a short way until a path leads on through the bogs beside the Allt a ‘ Mhuilinn .
32 Andrea Stuart tunes in to the rhythms of black history with Toni Morrison ; Carol Rumens glimpses the glamour of old Russia with Tatyana Tolstaya ; D J Taylor listens to the rural English past with Adam Thorpe
33 The hotel lies at the foot of a steep road which leads down through the trees from the main road .
34 The grounds lie at the foot of the south Antrim hills , and the land fronting the main buildings slopes down to the shores of Belfast Lough .
35 The grounds lie at the foot of the south Antrim hills , and the land fronting the main buildings slopes down to the shores of Belfast Lough .
36 It is built up as it ‘ gathers up from the influences of the environment the demands which that environment makes upon the ego and which the ego can not always rise to … . ’
37 Unfortunately , much of the opium produced by the plants ends up in the bloodstreams of drug addicts .
38 STEPPING OUT The Director of SHIRLEY VALENTINE teams up with the stars of EDUCATING RITA and CABARET
39 It has stuck to an antiquated way of operating that harks back to the days of guild power , and has refused to countenance criticism .
40 a rather simple girl who hangs about on the outskirts of a village …
41 He goes up through the hoops along the narrow , she said the first day when all the others were standing there shaking at the narrow bath he was just over it and down and she said you 've never seen him
42 It was a lot of work for one man , he told me , which is why the name Hugh Cruttwell always turns up on the credits of his movies .
43 GARY ARMSTRONG will take another giant step towards reviving his Scotland career when he lines up for the Barbarians at Leicester on December 28 .
44 Gloucestershire wicket keeper , Jack Russell lines up behind the stumps in tomorrow 's first test .
45 That ties in with the findings of a remarkable researcher .
46 For example writers usually form the beginnings of words reasonably well , but often this tails off towards the ends of words .
47 It surges up into the grounds of the fabled castle , into the cold and weary magic of Schloss Hartheim .
48 One can not help but reflect on how much all of this emerging artistry stems back to the exhibitions of Tom Van Sant 's work in the USA and UK during 1976 .
49 The eventual sacking of Charman largely stems back to the rows with Allison during the recording of the album .
50 It is inevitable then that repressed racial anxiety seeps out of the edges of these texts , returning to defy its containment in liberal discourse .
51 WHILE my heart goes out to the parents in the baby-swop drama , I have to agree with the midwife interviewed on TV who said that it was ‘ a disaster waiting to happen ’ .
52 If the poem goes back to the origins of religion , it also goes back to the origins of society and language .
53 If the poem goes back to the origins of religion , it also goes back to the origins of society and language .
54 The answer goes back to the origins of the Hungarian nation and tells us something about its individuality .
55 If the right hon. Gentleman goes back to the incidents to which he was referring , he will find that they were not ones that could naturally and immediately be followed by a statement .
56 The origin of the equivalence principle goes back to the experiments of Galileo .
57 the solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
58 the solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
59 The solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ Solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
60 The solicitors ' profession goes back to the courts of the 15th century , and to this day a solicitor 's full title is ‘ solicitor of the Supreme Court of England and Wales ’ .
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