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

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1 When the tides of magic flow strongly from the broken warp gate the Realm of Chaos expands , the Northern Wastes are swallowed up , and the armies of Chaos pour down through the Troll Country into Kislev and the Empire .
2 On his return , he and a group of artists set out with the idea of using Expo'92 as a showcase for their work .
3 Only in the nineteenth century did widespread protests against this kind of thinking break out within the main stream of Reformed theology itself .
4 As soon as the flow becomes established , in fact , piles of solid lumps of lava build up at the sides of the flow , and help to confine it to its course .
5 Works by followers of Caravaggio lead in to the seventeenth-century section : a ‘ Salome ’ by Cecco del Caravaggio ( Scardeoni ) ; ‘ Christ among the Elders ’ by Louis Finson ( Governale ) , and an ‘ Archimedes ’ by Dirk Van Baburen ( Visconteum ) .
6 The banks or organisations that issue them guarantee payment of bills run up by the credit card holder up to a certain limit .
7 Try explaining it to Ashley as he sits in the back of the minibus watching the streets of Salzburg slip by for the last time as — filming finished — we begin the journey back home .
8 The Department will make residential placements only in residential or nursing homes registered with Lothian Regional Council Social Work Department , with Lothian Health Board , or with any other Local Authority or Health Board in Scotland , or a Local Authority or Health Authority in England and Wales ; within the parameters on assessment , cost and availability of places set out in the Government 's Statutory Direction on Choice of Residential Accommodation , the Department is in principle prepared to purchase a residential service in any such home .
9 I watched a gradually widening circle of splashes go out from the centre of the explosion as the debris came back to earth .
10 She brought her hands away from her hips , which had hidden them quite well , and let a tin-opener and a tin of Whiskas drop on to the stairs .
11 In no sense could they be said to be members of industrial co-operatives : that is , of organisations set up for the manufacture of goods or the provision of services and wholly , or very largely , owned and ultimately controlled by those working in them .
12 In reality one feeds the other ; the store of ideas filter through to the bespoke work while the insights gained by designing work for specific needs provide an overview of market needs .
13 Put simply , the assumption behind the package of changes set out in the Act is that accountability , and so educational quality , are strengthened by :
14 Reconsideration of the issues raised in E 37 , E 38 and E 39 and the finalisation of the standards on each will enable the Board to reconfirm the package of changes set out in the Statement of Intent on the comparability of financial statements .
15 There was low cloud , white drifts of mist close down on the ice .
16 Every fifteen days , when the spring tides are at their peak , vast numbers of grunion ride in on the crests of waves and deliberately strand themselves on the shore .
17 In the dry season , groups of families travel out into the forest , moving camp every few days and living off wild foods , thus more uniformly exploiting the environment at a time of scarcity and the risk of irreversible depletion of the local forest .
18 It bases its human rights education work on the full range of rights set out in the UDHR and ICCPR .
19 I left Reine early , when all the people who live on the outskirts of Paris pour in to the city to work .
20 In the modelled docked structure , residues 4 , 5 , 6 , 7 , 8 of CsA protrude out into the solvent , and are thought to be involved in binding the effector protein , calcineurin .
21 Believe , consider , judge , think , declare , imagine , all may precede states of affairs set out in the form of an explicit clause ; they may also precede a structure consisting of noun phrase + adjective , where the adjective is a clausal one .
22 And to be really frank , one has to say when those kind of things come out in the open one has to say has the church got its priorities right ?
23 So d what sort of things go on in the flats ?
24 Yes I think er people should hear that er er er the royal family 's had a lot of correction in the past with the outside world and er come and go and you know , people know the royal family very well and they attract a lot of business , a lot of things go on behind the scenes whether it 's from glamour point of view .
25 I mean what what sort of things happen down on the ground ground level ?
26 Loads of water get up through the gates .
27 Just as Howard is scraping the last spoonful of apple crumble out of the bowl , a thought strikes him .
28 Over 2,000 people passed through the museum during its three month opening period in 1992 , so we are encouraged and look forward to seeing a larger number of people pass through during the six month opening period in 1993 .
29 Different sort of people turn out on the hunting field these days , too .
30 He grinned at her , his fleshy lips curled into a knowing line , and Fran felt the first stirrings of anger damp down on the fear .
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