Example sentences of "as you [verb] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 As you walk up to the first Munro , Stob Choire Claurigh , the whole complexity of the Aonachs becomes clear .
2 Obvious because it stares you in the face as you walk in to the corrie , and also because you can see that the icicle has n't quite formed despite rumours that it does .
3 The whole point of Lourdes comes out as you walk down from the centre of the town towards the river and the Cité Religieuse on the far bank .
4 It actually comes down to then , a more local area could be eighteen to twenty into Harlow , and then as you break down into the other figures , that then comes into a road and a postcode will actually go down to about fifteen houses in total , by putting your door number at the end of it , it makes it identifiable to your premises .
5 If , when you get on , all your weight is left on the back foot , the back of the board will inevitably sink and you will go for a swim — as you step on to the board move the weight forwards quickly .
6 Fig 51 When you place the weight over the back foot the tail will submerge , so as you step on to the board lean forwards placing weight through the front arm on to the mast foot .
7 Seven or eight thousand figures had taken up position kneeling on prayer carpets , so that as you walked in through the great red-stone gate you were confronted by rank upon rank of white-clad backs topped with brightly coloured turbans or embroidered mosque-caps .
8 As you come up down the road on the left ha , on the left hand side but you got ta go down there
9 So as you come up on the approach side , think position .
10 This is a peculiarly steep region , so much so in fact that the snow finds it more than usually difficult to stay where it has fallen ; there have been some sadly famous avalanches near Luz , the hamlets of Chéze and Saligos which you pass as you come in from the north both having been smothered and destroyed in their time .
11 As you come out of the Blackwall Tunnel , right by the new Financial Times building , there are at least two shut and boarded up pubs .
12 Just millions of conferences that just tire you out and exhaust you , and nothing change as you come out of the conference — it 's the same thing .
13 As you went in to the head end where the roof bolts were still intact , it was hard to imagine that approximately forty six metre , fifty metre of gate had just come in one go .
14 As you wake up in the morning , you may hear yourself say , ‘ If you go back to sleep , you wo n't have time to have breakfast .
15 The problems of implementing policy showed as you go down through the layers .
16 it 's on the dual carriageway as you go in on the
17 As you go in by the west end of the nave of the parish church , two black memorial plaques have been set into little side chapels on the north and south walls .
18 This means one must avoid calling from another room , talking with your face in shadow , walking away before you have finished the sentence or calling something over your shoulder as you go out of the door .
19 Erm there 's one just as you go out of the french window .
20 You saw in fact the lady as you came in about the same time as you came in who does that .
21 Otherwise you may find yourself later , as you sweep along on the actual business of writing , gradually drifting into producing quite another sort of book than the one you set out to write and in consequence disappointing readers ' expectations which at the beginning you had gone to trouble to arouse .
22 ‘ As soon as you stepped out of the car I knew something was wrong , ’ her friend confided later over a cup of tea .
23 If you do , make a third column and ask the LH to say the first and second words in the " different " column , then the first and third , etc. , as you tick off in the third column the ones that are now different from the new no. 1 .
24 As you edge up to the line , keep nudging into wind as this will create a small gap downwind .
25 ‘ But nothing prepares you for the blinding flash of flares and the noise of the thundercrackers as you run on to the field .
26 Too small and you 're likely to compress the filling and lose loft , too large and the bellows action of air as you move about in the bag will ensure you never keep a nice layer of still warm air around you , essential to keep you cosy .
27 The valley , homely and tree clad , is spread below you and as you drop down from the pass , just above Thwaite , you can see Muker down the dale looking like a toy village .
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