Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] [be] [vb pp] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Change skins , ’ he said , quietly yet clearly enough to be heard by Ace and the Marines . |
2 | At night the landscape glows a dull red , which emanates from the surface of Venus : the rocks , hotter than a domestic oven , glow just enough to be seen at night . |
3 | In time , the results may look coherent enough to be defined as Majorism . |
4 | So the network relationships contracted between individuals are functional , just as linguistic variation is also functional ( L. Milroy , 1987 , discusses examples in which social network relationships are important enough to be viewed as survival mechanisms ) . |
5 | So perhaps their disappearance was a brave bid to shake off that old image ( two years is long enough to be forgotten in teen land ) and appeal to a broader church . |
6 | When the background was off-white , the pattern was unobtrusive enough to be used as wallpaper in several features advertising other products and ‘ Laura Ashley ’ gained much incidental publicity in this way . |
7 | Indeed , I sat there in the muggy warmth until the balding , bull-necked scruff of a proprietor or manager started to put the chairs upside down on the swabbed tables — a peculiar custom which is surely unhygienic enough to be banned by law . |
8 | It was impossible to transfer sound waves mechanically from one flat disc to another without getting into geometrical difficulties , and an ordinary gramophone was not loud enough to be put in front of an acoustic recording horn . |
9 | Indeed , according to the results for Birmingham , about 2% of people have an aneurysm large enough to be considered for surgery . |
10 | Censorship is only to be exercised in accordance with the law of the land |
11 | We laboured for her because we liked her , but she tolerated no lazy work : she was a perfectionist and she had taste , insisting on only the best materials , which was unusual in the suburbs , where Victorian or Edwardian houses were generally smashed open and stripped bare , only to be filled with chipboard and Formica . |
12 | Sharing the Eucharist is a major part of a Christian 's basic baptismal rights , only to be denied in principle on account of grave sin . |
13 | Leaders of the Church of England have also attacked the ‘ hardness ’ of the government , only to be dismissed in return as ‘ cuckoos ’ ( see below , p. 289 ) . |
14 | People still starved , died of neglect and war , sought love and beauty only to be choked by hatred and ugliness . |
15 | Suppose he were to marry only to be faced with mutton broth ? |
16 | At the same time princely festive opera began to make its way abroad , only to be checked by war . |
17 | Where a member of staff was previously satisfied with work practice in a section , he or she may become a discontented or frustrated worker , because expectations were increased , together with knowledge and skill , only to be stifled by lack of interest on return to work . |
18 | Given the arguments of the sceptics , such failures are only to be expected of course ; aiming to replace anxious intellectual despair with a calm peace of mind , the traditional Pyrrhonian response would have been to advocate suspension of judgement . |
19 | In fact they expected to meet with USL chairman Bob Kavner and lay their money on the table the week before Christmas , only to be caught off guard by the Novell announcement . |
20 | They fed on the flying fish thrown up by pirate ships and whalers — then perched on the rigging , only to be removed at leisure for the cooking pot ! |
21 | Vice-captain Ashley Metcalfe arrived at the ground only to be told by skipper Martyn Moxon that he would not be in the side against Somerset . |
22 | I told them the arguments put forward by Visual Effects , only to be told in return manufacturing a conical base would have been much easier as it could all have been done from one two-part mould in half the time . ’ |
23 | This is so contrary to our general assumptions ( namely that the Holy Spirit , however vaguely we conceive of him , is an internal gift for the faithful , appropriate only to be mentioned in church ) that it is important for us to see the crucial link between the Spirit and mission which is presented to us in the pages of the New Testament . |
24 | Already as a young man of twenty-four he had pressed Eliot 's claims upon his seniors , John Crowe Ransom and Donald Davidson , in the circle of the Nashville ‘ fugitives ’ ; and this initially provincial dispute was played out on a national stage as early as 1923 when , in the New York Evening Post Literary Review , Ransom , with the courtly composure that was to be his hallmark , tried to promote Robert Graves before Eliot , only to be taken to task in the same columns by his younger associate . |
25 | This would on past experience coax the crocuses out in Hyde Park , only to be spiked by frost in a few days ' time . |
26 | But they were only to be offered upon condition that this created no precedent . |
27 | It delayed attacking till the following morning , and a calm during the night enabled the French ships , showing no lights , to make their escape and simply drift down Channel , only to be overtaken around midnight by a ferocious north-east gale . |
28 | Ceps , morels and other wild fungi were previously only to be found in specialist shops during the picking season ( from August to October ) . |
29 | The court allowed a deposition to be taken in New Zealand , which might convince the other parties of the genuineness of the claim , but it was only to be admitted in evidence with their consent . |
30 | Out to Tormentum Malorum they jetted , only to be greeted with scepticism by the Navigator ensconced inside . |