Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adv prt] [prep] the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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31 | It goes along with the common complaint that there are areas and methods of serious investigation which are just not touched by scholastic doctrines . |
32 | Because she , she goes in off the deep end and you |
33 | The world of motor racing loves to surround itself in secrecy … what goes in to the automatic gearboxes … suspensions and highly tuned engines is more to do with science than sport … |
34 | With true teen anger he latches on to the witty cynicism of the two Lenny 's , Cohen and Bruce , but fires them up with youthful vitriol . |
35 | European Alexandria lingers on in the Italianate architecture , the long lines of balconies along the seafront , in the old shop signs in French and Arabic , in the Greek cafes like Trianon 's and Pastroudis with their air of idleness and neglect , and in old-fashioned pensions like the Hotel Normandie . |
36 | Even Baumrind ( 1982 ) , supporting Gilligan 's different voice hypothesis against what she sees as the traditionalism of the psychology of androgyny , holds on to the traditional framework of Jungian psychology in order to do this , and later ( 1986 ) , reinterprets the hypothesis in a humanist and spiritual framework , which is not differentiated by gender . |
37 | Even if Hanson holds on to the British end of the ARC operation , it still has a long list of ConsGold assets to offload including : |
38 | That tradition lives on at the Banzai Pipeline , not so much the Wembley Stadium of surfing as its Coliseum . |
39 | Lives on behind the wrinkled brows |
40 | We can assure the world that the spirit of wartime Liverpool still lives on in the young taxi drivers , news vendors , waiters , waitresses and the police . |
41 | The 112-bhp 1.6-litre engine lives on in the entry-level £10,298 Lantra GLSi . |
42 | Today , the legend lives on throughout the supreme range of sports and leisurewear , available throughout the UK . |
43 | Your vessel then heads on to the wonderful wine town of Rüdesheim , arriving around 6.30pm . |
44 | One man who could have a busy day on Sunday if he drops in on the above conference will be Michael Billington , the theatre critic of The Guardian . |
45 | but looks down on the unchanged saffron flowers |
46 | Grant looks down into the dark waters . |
47 | These vines overlook a small north-south running valley , on the other side of which a 170-metre high spur of vines drops down to the northwestern edge of the village . |
48 | River Island women 's range has already got party dresses in for the festive season . |
49 | When they are in moult they often sit ashore on the rocks , when their dark brown plumage blends in with the dark rocks . |
50 | The primarily agricultural work blends in with the liturgical calendar of the church . |
51 | Junior Bent ( Bristol City , 12.06 ) , Efan Ekoku ( Bournemouth , 12.07 ) , Adrian Littlejohn ( Sheff Utd , 12.08 ) , Iffy Onuora ( Huddersfield 12.09 ) , Keith Curle ( Man City , 12.10 ) , Rod McDonald ( Walsall , 12.18 ) , Tony Witter ( QPR , 12.19 ) and John Goodman ( Millwall , 12.40 ) , and late replacements Vance Warner ( Nottm Forest ) and Michael Brown ( Bolton ) , who stands in for the injured Stuart Storer ( 12.17 ) . |
52 | He glances down at the final layer of glasses . |
53 | My daughter lives over on the main Oxford road . |
54 | Man stands over against the awful otherness of God , by which his own existence is challenged , questioned and judged ; but in faith he finds the power nonetheless to live in that encounter with God by which each present moment becomes a meeting with eternity . |
55 | The power produced drops off as the harmonic number increases , so to generate the higher harmonics requires much higher input intensity . |
56 | ‘ I 'll leave you with young Hot-to-Trotsky here , then , ’ Clare says , patting Yvonne on the shoulder and winking at me as she sidles off through the cheering crowd . |
57 | He 'll need a lot of breath for this lengthy stint , which heads off towards the new year . |
58 | This line of islands swings round to the north , and finally back to the west through South Georgia , describing a great loop , and then heads off for the extreme south of South America . |
59 | It starts off with the prayer-framed sequence of events up to the point in the narrative when Christ is crowned with thorns and condemned to death , but in a more compressed form . |
60 | Editorial decisions are backed by extensive market research , and manuscripts selected and edited according to ‘ whether the story lives up to the high standards that Mills and Boon readers have set for us … we ca n't please every one of our readers all the time , but it is n't for want of trying ! ’ |