Example sentences of "[noun sg] [vb -s] [adv prt] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The story goes back to the major earthquake , magnitude 7 on the Richter scale , which rocked Greece in February 1981 .
2 In another account of youth work , Hubert Secretan rehearsed the same complaint : ‘ Every boy 's sympathy goes out to the lithe and resourceful crook …
3 The origin of the synagogue goes back to the Babylonian period .
4 As Lane points out for the Soviet Union : ‘ However much control they have over Soviet production enterprises , managers and administrators can neither dispose of their assets for their private good , nor can their children have any exclusive rights to nationalised property ’ ( Lane 1982 , p. 135 ) .
5 Babur looks out over the dark quiet trees to the white lights and feels at home .
6 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 ! ’
7 My mind goes back to the original fifteen-year Hospital Plan , published in January 1962 .
8 The architecture shows the influence of the Italian colonisation ; the modern harbour harks back to the healthy export of livestock to the Gulf States ; and the large scale agricultural activity in the adjacent fertile valley now lies dormant with equipment and crops stolen and even the electricity pylons stripped of their cables .
9 And as pressure mounted for military intervention , NATO agreed to draw up plans to use force to make sure humanitarian aid gets through to the stricken region .
10 This result spills over onto the optimal output decision : since one can expect better sales prices with a higher σ or a lower k , one should accordingly produce more output with a higher σ or lower k .
11 It 's a fair cop : female fan gives in to the shamanic rhythms in Houston
12 All I mean by forearm rotation is that the forearm rotates slightly to the left on the backswing so that the club moves up on the correct swing plane .
13 If all the transactions costs are zero , this condition collapses back to the previous no-arbitrage equality .
14 An ill-defined report of a possible murder comes out of the small racing town of Lambourn .
15 I ought in all fairness to acknowledge that no American fault comes up to the revolting habit … of dropping or wrongly inserting the letter h .
16 ( Koch 1985a , p. 149 ) Koch and others have stressed that because this conception of the gaze goes back to the Freudian idea of an originary bisexuality it therefore affords a better explanation of women 's actual viewing behaviour , e.g. their multiple identifications with either gender .
17 The work of cataloguing goes back to the early years of Italian unification in the late nineteenth century when the first photographs were taken of archaeological sites and of celebrated pictures and monuments .
18 His father had died serving the Empire as one of the Black Riders and as the boy looks down on the great imperial road from the quiet house of his foster-parents he listens to tales of the powerful Count Jasper , Governor of the Citadel and commander of those orthodox forces .
19 The primarily agricultural work blends in with the liturgical calendar of the church .
20 The 112-bhp 1.6-litre engine lives on in the entry-level £10,298 Lantra GLSi .
21 When they are in moult they often sit ashore on the rocks , when their dark brown plumage blends in with the dark rocks .
22 I can not see how they could be established in British literary education , where there are no graduate schools as such , and the narrow , uphill tunnel of A-level work leads on to the rocky , cloudy uplands of the undergraduate degree , with its confused mixture of practical criticism and thematic study , analysis and literary history , coverage and special subjects .
23 We are not told this but it is easy to say that the plot opens up in the Deep American South between the two world wars , from the way the coloured people are treated , the fashions , and the descriptive backgrounds .
24 As confidence in the concept rises the emphasis of the design work moves on to the scheming phase .
25 Since we had complete snow cover , A Mad Tall Litho Lad was buried deep beneath a white mantle , and cutting steps up through the soft snow was becoming increasingly difficult .
26 From here to the coast the hills are open , the sun pours down on the huge dry fields , the atmosphere is colourless .
27 This law dates back to the Middle Ages , when it was a means of filling the royal coffers , and until now it has allowed the State ( today the Treasury ) to claim possession of valuable objects whose owners can not be traced .
28 This means , in turn , that the initial state of the learner must be as a possessor of vast battalions of hypotheses which are selected out as the child bumps up against the physical world and the human conceptual system .
29 Valdštejnská continues round to the National Gallery exhibition gallery in the Valdštejn Riding School .
30 The party 's chair , Sara Parkin , said : " Unlike the other political parties , this manifesto faces up to the real issues " .
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