Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] through the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 However , Hall ( 1982a ; 1982b ) hoped that higher-skilled and better-paid jobs would eventually Appear through the same processes that had driven countries such as Hong Kong , South Korea and Singapore from low-grade , low-paid economies into higher , if not always ‘ higher-tech ’ production .
2 Later when he wanted to release him he had only to go through the same motion but this time having his hand covered with a substance that would neutralize the smell .
3 He not only got through the first round but he reached the final again !
4 When the time came for the cake to be cut , Breeze handed the knife to Susan — but her wrists were not strong enough to saw through the solid mass .
5 As a body corporate , a building society can only act through the human agency of its officers and employees .
6 A panel made up of a small group of SCOTVEC 's senior committee members was brought together to sift through the many college 's nominees .
7 Those 35 were good enough to come through the pre-qualifying system .
8 It 's bad enough looking through the new sections and the main articles and seeing nothing mentioned less than E4 , 6b .
9 Going on to the last lap Dunlop had matters well in hand but further down the field behind McCallen there was drama when Alan Patterson , who had been in third place and going well , suddenly shot through the final bend and took the wrong road for the second time today losing his chance of a place .
10 The desperate or the disillusioned have poor vantage points on society ; their view is continually obscured , and they are constantly peering through the clouded lenses of a camera lacking high-quality focusing mechanisms .
11 Brockway had specifically rejected any proposal to reaffiliate to the Labour Party at the end of 1934 : " The decisive objection to this " , he wrote , " is that a Socialist can now only function through the Labour Party by giving up his Socialism " .
12 The economic and unemployment misery daily portrayed through the British media should make us all more aware that we must begin to look after our own .
13 So I was racing through South London on my bike , nearly getting crushed several times by lorries , head bent over the dropped handlebars , swiftly running through the ten Campagnola gears , nipping through traffic , sometimes mounting the pavement , up one-way streets , breaking suddenly , accelerating by standing up on the pedals , exhilarated by thought and motion .
14 Each of the six songs aired tonight moves through repetitive , bass-heavy passages , seductive segments in which Linda steers the band into more melodic territory and shocking moments when power chords suddenly cut through the mesmeric grooves and things take on an atmosphere of nervy unpredictability .
15 Where the problem exists in one part of the country , or in one community , it is greatly magnified through the small screens in the sitting room , which multiply that problem by stimulating its imitation .
16 We have all gone through the same system ( which seems not to have harmed us ) , and it is difficult to accept that current students should be taught differently .
17 Raising myself on one hand to peer over the ditch before clambering out onto the road , my hand and forearm suddenly went through the soft earth up to the elbow .
18 The road suddenly appeared through the thinning trees and Jenna had to scramble down a bank , cross a ditch and she was standing on the firm tarmac of the main highway .
19 The experiences of former generations are inherited in the id , they are not all learned through the cultural transmission processes with which social scientists are familiar — through education and religious teachings , for example .
20 Your long spade will be sharp enough to chop through the smaller roots with little if any delay .
21 ‘ I raised my game just enough to get through the early rounds , ’ he said of his performance .
22 Publicly suppressed since the 1920s , these qualities have only survived through the black economy , or through private family oral traditions .
23 The block surface is ignored as the cylinder is initially checked to establish that it successfully passes through the negative surface defining the interior boundary around the hole .
24 The Prime Minister may have complained that under former management the poll tax was bounced through , but he will gladly ram through the new poll tax .
25 He wondered how many people in all the mental hospitals in the country — or the world " , — come to that — were really fallen Warriors who had either cracked up from the strain of trying to live in this hell-hole , or simply made the wrong choice and thought that the test was just seeing through the whole thing and then having the courage to stand out and make that challenge .
26 ‘ Aye , yesterday ! ’ she exclaimed accusingly , seizing on the distraction when his words finally got through the strange fog in her brain .
27 Transforms are thus rolled through the hierarchical spaces by construction of the coordinates in the next associated space , until the reference layer is reached ( see Figure 2.31 ) .
28 Quick release crampons ( Grivel 2Fs ) worked well for glacier approaches , although the plastic heel lever was easily felt through the soft heel leather of the boot .
29 I just walk through the basic moves so the cameras can plot where everybody 's going to be , and we try to work out how long people will take to walk down the stairs so we can play the right amount of music .
30 When it fills fills the cistern fills up anyway ploomp through the whole house .
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