Example sentences of "[coord] [verb] [adv] [adv] in the " in BNC.
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1 | Although the last allegation is regarded with some scepticism by royal watchers , their speculation is heightened because the royal couple have barely been seen to exchange words or glances so far in the tour , even though they have been smiling and cheerful to those they have met . |
2 | You may be limited by the hours the crêche is open as not all remain open in the evening , or begin early enough in the morning . |
3 | On a slope high above Wigtown Bay in Dumfries and Galloway , nearly always fretted by a breeze or whistling more stridently in the wind , is an especially fine duo of 5,000-year-old tombs called Cairnholy . |
4 | Because they had been confused and upset early on in the campaign they found it hard to relax and trust us . |
5 | The force of the blow pushed them apart , and they arrived at opposite walls simultaneously , kicked again , and met once more in the centre . |
6 | And I used to load the boot up and bring them and load home like in the boot of my car my Sales Manager said to me the other day , how the hell did you get bright red dust in your boot ? |
7 | If there is a tendency for grains to become charged and leap about disconcertingly in the beam , a dried aqueous grain suspension usually has sufficient adhesion . |
8 | Walked through the forest and came out right in the colliery yard . |
9 | We went to the concert by bus , and Bob was left in New York ( he had collapsed while jogging in Central Park ) and came along later in the day . |
10 | Seaman badly bruised a hip and came off early in the second half last weekend but has received extensive treatment . |
11 | I made some Tommy-sized bets and ate very well in the ( literally ) below-stairs bar , and in general walked around , race-card in hand , binoculars around neck , exactly as usual . |
12 | In most gliders the rudder will have overbalanced and moved hard over in the direction of the spin . |
13 | Initially , the EPA barred the trade-off between smokestack or plant emissions and wind-blown dust , arguing that industrial processes emitted smaller particles that stay in the air longer and lodge more deeply in the lungs . |
14 | She did not fire when I asked her to go with the winner and faded right out in the last furlong , ’ said disappointed rider Frankie Dettori . |
15 | The four healthy children lay sound asleep , their breaths coming and going almost visibly in the light from the street lamp that came through the flowered cotton curtains . |
16 | The chlorine is picked up as aerosols droplets containing salt for example from breaking waves taken up by the atmosphere , carried over the land , rained down again , gets into the rivers and ends up back in the sea . |
17 | This discontent , which had been instrumental in provoking the challenge to her leadership by Sir Anthony Meyer in 1989 , continued to plague the Prime Minister through the first half of 1990 and flared up again in the weeks prior to the leadership contest . |
18 | Narrow staircases , infested with mouse droppings , where those who had no money whatsoever huddled on the steps for shelter , coming like wraiths in the night when they were less likely to be turned away , and drifting off again in the early morning . |
19 | There can be no doubt that the policy of Republicans must be to ensure that everything is done to make this demand more strong , vigorously organised , widespread , well-expressed and heard not only in the North but in Britain and throughout the world . |
20 | They flared into hissing , spluttering life , and to the accompaniment of the Prophet 's hoarse scream of ‘ No-o-o-o ! ’ he tossed the angrily flaring box onto his gasoline-soaked lap , spun on his heel and walked quickly away in the direction of the road . |
21 | Hugh urged Mrs Tobias into her taxi and walked off smartly in the opposite direction . |
22 | Dorothy , one suspects , was always too much ‘ the perfect lady ’ , and schooled too thoroughly in the pre-1914 code of proud reticence ( a code which incidentally her husband also adhered to ) , for her to escape the role of ‘ poor Dorothy ’ that some recent writers have cast her in . |
23 | About forty helium balloons that materialised from nowhere with this American girl have been wound hard up into the window , and judder maniacally together in the wind . |
24 | There was a surprising amount of turn and lift so early in the year and when Gooch had reached 75 , he gloved a catch to Paul Johnson at short gully . |
25 | The impression already given that , by and large , the women interviewed did not enjoy their work , is dissected and examined more thoroughly in the next chapter . |
26 | From these you can try the patterns not only for tension but to see whether the number of rows between , as recommended , look and feel exactly right in the yarn you are using . |
27 | I 'm 40 years old and feel really down in the dumps . |
28 | Unlike an animal , man can halt his incipient reactions , reason about his situation , and respond more intelligently in the light of increased understanding . |
29 | The manager of the recruiting bureau may or may not be present at the interview , but may be present when discussion takes place afterwards , or may have submitted a written report on the recruit 's attitudes and progress so far in the bureau . |
30 | Or if you wanted to go home for your dinner and go back again in the afternoon , well , that was four and sixpence , which entitled you to do a Saturday journey . |