Example sentences of "[pers pn] [adv prt] [prep] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I think both he and Weatherall are outstanding prospects , but need an ‘ old head ’ to bring them on over the next couple of years ( pity about O'Leary ) .
2 He urged them on through the mounting waves until they too reached the Rebecca , and he was able to ram one hole , fill it with pitch , then another , and another , round the hull beneath the overhang of the bows , in a rain of missiles , with fire sizzling around him , and his fellow fighters hanging on , hoping for the moment when the timbers would be ablaze .
3 The next day , place the black fondant tiles all over the roof , in neat overlapping rows , securing them on with a little water or royal icing .
4 Out of his sack he fished a pair of sticky-rubber knee-pads and proceeded to strap them on with a complicated system of webbing .
5 I think it opens up the child 's awareness to what 's available and what 's coming erm moves them on into the next century really .
6 ‘ I always wanted to work with a squad of young players and bring them on for a few seasons .
7 It is pesticide-free and traps male moths by luring them on to a sticky pad with the aid of a sex attractant ( a pheromene lure capsule ) given off by female moths to attract a mate .
8 The reason for this may well be that the hospital consultant is reluctant to let go medical responsibility for former patients and thrust them on to a local GP , but he is not normally easily available when off duty or working in a clinic many miles away .
9 ‘ A person who receives goods on sale or return and at once passes them on to someone else under a like contract is entitled to demand them from that third person just as soon as the original owner of the goods has the right to demand them from him , but I am clear that , if he allows a period to elapse before he hands them on to a third person on sale or return , he has done an act which limits and impedes his power of returning the goods .
10 But then to pass them on to a third party is heinous . ’
11 It has become a specialist in adding value to chemicals and selling them on to the major companies .
12 Republics collect taxes but are refusing to pass them on to the central government .
13 It 's dragged a few graceful oddities away from comparing navel fluff in their garages and shoved them on to the European circuit .
14 He pulled off his work jeans and threw them on to the little pile in the corner .
15 The bodymaker passed the doors to the finishers , who in turn passed them on to the french polishers ; the doors then moved along to those whose work it was to hang them in position , the operations being so arranged that the polished door was completed just at the point where it was to be hung on the coach .
16 In every generation , REPRODUCTION takes the genes that are supplied to it by the previous generation , and hands them on to the next generation but with minor random errors — mutations .
17 But their real function is to give people a chance to be famous for five minutes , by saying something that will get them on to the next news broadcast .
18 She designed a print room based on an eighteenth-century concept , by cutting out black and white prints and their hanging bows and pasting them on to an apricot Regency background .
19 Instead of getting rid of the programmes , they should sack the bosses who put them on in the first place .
20 Dressing apraxia refers to difficulty in putting on clothes ; the patient may manipulate them haphazardly , unable to relate them spatially to his own body , or he may be unable to put them on in the correct sequence .
21 It would be best to grow them on in the smaller tank as they are likely to be attacked , if not eaten , by the larger fish .
22 You did n't turn them on until the second part .
23 He pulled rank and went to bed at half past eleven , leaving me on for the late-night drinks .
24 They 'll be easing me on as the new presenter so as not to put too much pressure on me .
25 ’ You put me on to a good thing , ’ he went on , ’ with Ardakke .
26 My brother could make me cry just by lifting me on to a five-foot-high garden trellis and leaving me there , so I was hardly a miniature Chris Bonnington .
27 Which brings me on to the major bookshop sellers , led by two strong titles :
28 yes and that , that in a way leads me on to the next party , if we 're gon na have an agreement between this group or , you know , the other group
29 This is almost certainly because the decision to send them in during the later stages of the accident was political ( western-made robots might have been used instead , had the new Soviet leader , one Mikhail Gorbachev , been willing to let the West learn the extent of the disaster ) .
30 The cultural value of all these activities was thought to be negligible but at least some useful qualities were being inculcated and above all their commercial basis bound them in to the mainstream organization and values of middle-class society .
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