Example sentences of "[vb base] there [prep] the [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Jane and children plan to fly out to Cape Town when the boats dock there at the end of the third leg in April .
2 I 've had some armchairs brought in and put there at the window in case you want to talk to people more informally than around the table . ’
3 They spread there from the area of the Aegean at about the same time as the Israelite tribes themselves moved into the land from the east .
4 Whereas I lie there in the night with an expired passport , pushing a baggage trolley with a squeaking wheel across to the wrong carousel .
5 All I am conscious of , as I stand there with the page in my hand , is that here at last are the two terms of my inquiry , Strategy and Summerchild , united by the same sheet of paper .
6 I sometimes stand there in the darkness for a moment , watching them , putting off the moment when I walk up the five tessellated steps to the front door .
7 ‘ We must make sure we get there before the start of the programme , ’ said Maggie , giving Susan a wink .
8 Yeah , but it 's very , it 's well , can , I do n't suppose it can be , I might of had one of the speakers out but I know there in the back of the speakers , you had this loft insulation it 's full of that
9 The only thing they wanted to hear was that the prophet had said that everyone could go to Zap Zone and stay there for the rest of their natural lives .
10 And you had to get out on the floor that catered for your particular dominant moral propensity , and stay there for the whole of Eternity .
11 you go there to the left towards Grange-over- Sands
12 During aerobic walking your heart and breathing rates increase , level out , then remain there for the duration of the exercise .
13 They settled in armchairs and she saw how the standard lamp threw shadows on his face , accentuating the hollows in his cheeks and the overhang of his brow so that his eyes seemed to sink into their sockets and burn there in the firelight like lamps in darkened caves .
14 ‘ I speak not only of the Army — although as Colonel Moore knows probably better than I , the acts of heroism you see there in the face of pain — wounds , cuts , torn limbs ’ — he looked at Mrs Crump ; she swayed slightly — ‘ severed arteries , gashed heads ’ — Mrs Moore was unaffected — ‘ and all the terrible lacerations and disfigurements received on the human body in modern warfare ’ — Miss D'Arcy nodded ; she was intrigued — ‘ but I speak of the self-inflicted torments of the Indian , the Negro and the Mussulman . ’
  Next page