Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [adv] [adv] [verb] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | FACING PAGE Many dogs will instinctively jump up either to seize a toy or as a greeting . |
2 | Does it so restrict as effectively to frustrate the actual development permitted ? |
3 | But performance alone has never yet ensured the job of a French nationalised industry chairman . |
4 | Many scientists saw at once its far-reaching implications and a whole spate of major papers were published in 1967 and 1968 , which quite suddenly added up together to make a completely new way of looking at the Earth 's main working parts : Plate Tectonics . |
5 | Then you 'd better fall out again said the magician . |
6 | I keep going round the painting seeing extra bits that need to be emphasised , or perhaps to blend in too start a line . |
7 | Unlike the cross-shareholdings seen in America in the era of Pierpont Morgan , the links are not usually between competitors so do not necessarily indicate a cartel . |
8 | So do n't ever say a financier does n't measure up ; he 's the only one who does . ’ |
9 | Students at London University were almost unanimous today in saying a couple going to bed together did n't necessarily mean the woman consents to sex . |
10 | Because she obviously had n't even noticed the sudden splash of blood-red petals against the white April cumulus . |
11 | A lawful act which is performed carelessly does not automatically become an unlawful act for this purpose , even if a lawful act done carelessly amounts to an offence ( e.g. careless driving ) : Andrews v DPP , above . |
12 | This alone does not automatically encourage a singleness of view about management 's purposes . |
13 | Abortive attempts in our time to shuffle off the whole experience and make light of its impact have only begun comparatively recently to attract the attention of psycho-analysts . |
14 | Repetitions and variations can be easily built up easily to create an atmosphere like this . |
15 | This would have been impossible with the yoke-harness , because as soon as the horse begins to pull with it the neck-strap presses on the animal 's windpipe and thus tends not only to restrict the flow of blood to its head , but also to suffocate it ! |
16 | You are very alive , very active … you just travel too fast to see the end result . |
17 | I 've already eaten enough today to do a man for a week . |
18 | ( 2.9 ) unc The laws above do not quite catch the full range of equivalences related to ALT with SKIP guards . |
19 | Benjamin had just lived long enough to see the first of his children married : Ella Frances May Titford 's wedding had taken place on 26 August 1905 , in that very church in which her father was to collapse eight days later . |
20 | Application forms appeared in the July issue of The Red Triangle — if you no longer have this please contact the Alumni Office at Napier University for an application form . |
21 | The inexperienced advice worker thus need no longer feel a burden on colleagues , as the need for support has formally been recognised . |
22 | The experiments just mentioned not only introduce a much-needed control procedure but they also extend the generality of the effect . |
23 | But they have signally failed so far to build an intellectual constituency in wider circles of the kind that gave Thatcherism — which had little intellectual depth of its own — the basis on which to construct a new kind of politics . |
24 | Parent companies can thereby keep under tight control the capital they have tied up in idle stocks and make substantial savings on fixed outlay in storage or warehousing . |
25 | Things have now finally reached the point which our Führer at the outbreak of this struggle prophesied to world Jewry in his great speech : ‘ … should Jewry once more succeed in again plunging the nations into a new world war , it would be the end of that race , and not ours . ’ |
26 | Of all the treatments for obesity , none could be more physiological or less psychological than the operation known as jejeunoileostomy or ileal bypass , in which most of the small intestine is short circuited thus greatly reducing the amount of intestine available for absorbing food . |
27 | That Peel , leading the Tory opposition , recognised that the Whigs ' Bill would in the short run unite the middle and lower classes in support of the Government is one thing ; to infer from this that Grey and his team deliberately set out both to counter the threat of revolution and to do so in a way which would ultimately isolate the working class , quite another . |
28 | It came as a shock to find that the Englishman 's home did not necessarily have a spare bedroom or a bath or inside lavatory . |
29 | It was a straight question , and he genuinely did n't already know the answer . |
30 | Beware of swing sequences that show the late hit of the hands , as illustrated in Diagram A. This position at halfway in the downswing may be ideal for the skilled or powerful player , because the hands and lower arms will still release early enough to return the clubface squarely to the back of the ball . |