Example sentences of "[vb past] [adv prt] [prep] the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | But she could n't forget , as the lights twinkled on around the entire hillside , that this man owned them all , every last apartment , every cypress , every swimming-pool and tennis court . |
2 | There was a stool nearby , and , climbing on this , Seddon got on to the firm edge of the sink where it met the draining board and reached up to the hatch . |
3 | He got on to the internal phone and asked for petty cash , not specifying any amount . |
4 | ‘ We were sent upstairs to address envelopes as ‘ the girls ’ ‘ , she recalls , ‘ while Clive got on with the serious business of deciding about the paper . |
5 | Gone are the days when professionals left the business of fees , commissions , variation charges , reimbursables and the rest to underlings whilst they got on with the interesting work . |
6 | Even a piece of her mind could cost you dearly if you got on on the wrong side of her . |
7 | The 1993 event started in York on 14 February and we will report on how they got on in the next issue . |
8 | The hospitality extended to a good meal , and before leaving we were given the facilities of a nearby chateau , where the jeep driver and I had the luxury of a hot bath , laid on by the local Mayor . |
9 | Herds of giraffe and waterbuck raced across the swamps in our shadow as we swooped on to the sandy airstrip . |
10 | Crossroads lived on under the Central banner , but there were many more changes in store and some viewers did n't like take to those either . |
11 | Plans agreed on by the first meeting included a shopping trip to Holland to visit a shop which sells outsize jeans and sweat-shirts and another to Germany to a shop which claims to sell the biggest size shoes in the world . |
12 | He turned his back to her and walked off into the open-plan living-room , with its huge glass patio doors that led on to the front garden . |
13 | Which led on to the obvious conclusion . ’ |
14 | Viola was beaming benevolently as she read on into the last column . |
15 | She passed on to the next sheet . |
16 | The squeeze is , in turn , passed on to the next person . |
17 | Much weakened constitutionally , I passed on to the next stage . |
18 | It is possible for teachers to keep a personal notebook which does not form part of the record and is not open to subject access , but if information is intended to be used officially and passed on to the next teacher it should be treated in the same way as the formal record . |
19 | Each Tuesday he meets his unelected Cabinet , the Executive Council , and they approve — ‘ rubber stamp ’ is how critics describe it — legislation passed on by the Civil Service . |
20 | And just as human wisdom is only perceived and passed on by the human spirit inside us , so it is with the truth of God . |
21 | There is Israeli ‘ absentee ’ legislation and there are land expropriation laws passed on from the British mandate . |
22 | Once stomachs had settled to life at sea their owners got down to the serious work of filling them with the gargantuan meals offered . |
23 | He got down to the serious matter of explaining to the gnomes that the intricate , almost scholarly , Fidchell that the Wolfkings had enjoyed , bore no resemblance to the horrid gruesome version that the Gruagach played . |
24 | If he 's been largely absent from the small screen for the last two years ( the South Bank Show spoof , Norbert Smith , was a revamp of an old idea ) , that 's because he 's unplugged the phone , taken time out with his two old drinking pals and got down to the serious business of mucking about . |
25 | Back in Barbados , we got down to the serious business of Christmas . |
26 | As Vimla pirouetted , pulling her sari over her head in a parody of the Dance of the Seven Veils , Chaman Guru put down the cymbals and got down to the serious business of collecting money . |
27 | And erm , after that they got down to the serious business ! |
28 | When we got down to the final paragraph , Ms Green says that all this extra work will mean that more staff will be needed , and that she 's asking for money . |
29 | Where the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries gave way to the nineteenth , things became crisper : you read of a profusion of Elizas and Thomases , of beloved wives and lamented parents : white marble crept in with the grey limestone . |
30 | Zipped up the inside , and with a squared off toe , it was the last word in futuristic chic that was to be adapted and toned down for the mass market . |