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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 From the tarn , I followed my nose down to a cairn that stands on the shoulder above Deepdale Side where the view down Deepdale into Dentdale was so good that I sat and looked at it for a good half-hour until the thought that I needed to be home by late afternoon pushed me on down to the green lane of the old Craven Way .
2 She turned to look at him , and he drew her gently down on to the cool grass .
3 Each morning trucks from the factory bumped along a dust road and turned down on to the low gravel bank where we were moored .
4 Move down on to the second page then .
5 She flopped down on to the padded driver 's seat , planning to catch up on her sleep .
6 One hand was tangled in her hair , holding her down , and with the other he traced a line past her collarbone and down on to the softer flesh beneath , tugging the neckline of her dress lower and lower , until Folly could feel it brush the swollen aureoles of her breasts under the silk of her bra .
7 On other JAR matters , the Library staff restructuring has pushed a lot more work down on to the front desk staff , and I 'm sure that the effects will be noticed in future .
8 I picked up my cup and saucer and flopped down on to the half-moon hearthrug , curious as to what the desired effect of the substance was supposed to be , and wondering why it had n't worked , when I noticed the saucer felt thicker .
9 The thinning veil of cloud eddied in a gust of wind , and suddenly we were below it , looking down on to the flat roofs of a town spread out in a broad valley of rain-washed green .
10 Joe now withdrew his hand from the desk and , rising to his feet , he looked down on to the upturned faces of the two men and said , ‘ My mother may remain in the house as long as she wishes , but the running of it , the accounts and such , I wish to leave in your control .
11 ’ He tossed them down on to the small saucer on the table .
12 Shadows wavered backwards through the green railings and down on to the sunken slipway leading to the chain-ferry .
13 We reached the edge of the cliff and flopped down on to the soft turf .
14 But there was nothing , and with a quick twist of her body she hoisted herself over the wooden rail to slither down on to the deserted deck .
15 He heard a gasp from the crowd of people gathered below , he seemed to hang forever in mid-air and then , miraculously , he was crashing down on to the opposite roof .
16 I revived as I felt myself go hurtling through the air and crashed down on to the wooden planks of the scaffold .
17 She did not weep silently like her mother in a web of hands and hair , but noisily , like a child , with great sobs and huge tears that splashed down on to the brown wool of her skirt to which little bits of hay still clung from the afternoon .
18 The move to Apollo Place brought Minton to an area long associated with artists ; through a circular window half-way up the stairs he looked down on to the next door studio which had once belonged to Turner .
19 We came out of the beach-hut belt and slid down on to the barrelling freeway .
20 The doctor looked down on to the younger children 's heads and his teeth clamped down even harder on his cigar .
21 If this happens at the same time as the inevitable swing into wind , it can result in a very rapid rolling over on to the into-wind wing-tip .
22 He sailed past the President 's beach house before coming over on to the other track .
23 He did n't have to be told why he should hurry — the sea was already beginning to trickle over on to the upper deck .
24 Three of them heaved the bulk over on to the high rocks and after a few more buckets of water , they stood back to inspect it further .
25 She pulls over on to the hard shoulder , gets out , opens the boot , gets out the spare tyre and the jack , jacks up the car , takes off the old wheel , puts on the new one , lets the jack down , puts it and the wheel back in the boot , closes it , gets back in the car and drives on , knowing that she will be fifteen minutes late .
26 Every so often I 'd have to grip the wheel tightly because what I really wanted to do was interrupt my drollery , pull over on to the hard shoulder , turn to my passenger and say , ‘ By the way , Stuart , I 'm in love with your wife . ’
27 She strode to the panelling , searched , found and stepped through on to the dilapidated back staircase landing , just as the Bishop and Lord Cumbermound were entering the room .
28 Travelling along the island 's one main road and off on to the dusty tracks we were amazed at how friendly the locals were .
29 Yussuf was pitched off on to the other side .
30 Does my right hon. Friend accept that we returned with an impression of economic chaos — and the impression that , although aid from this country and others is welcomed , it is feared that too much is being siphoned off on to the black market ?
  Next page