Example sentences of "they [verb] [verb] [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | Humbled at Sheffield Eagles on Sunday , in their first game after the defeat of Canberra Raiders , they failed to bounce back in the Lancashire Cup last night , losing to a disciplined Warrington side . |
2 | They lay packed together in the gloom , trying to make themselves comfortable on the wires . |
3 | They got called up by the Cabinet Office . |
4 | The boaters , 4 adults and 4 children were sailing on the River Severn , when they got swept up by the Severn bore . |
5 | He went on to describe the drivers swearing as they got snarled up in the midday Cairo traffic . |
6 | I was told I could see him for an hour but they got held up on the way and I was rushed through the visit . |
7 | It was his intention to aid Larsen in evacuating the kids from the upper levels , before they became trapped there by the fire . |
8 | They eat standing up in the kitchen . |
9 | And the West peal comes appeal and the West 's heard becomes a heard and the one sort of difference that 's still there and it may take quite while to go is that the East Mainland when they 're saying a sentence they tend to go up at the end of the sentence the voice rises . |
10 | I would like to go to the town today , and she 's awfully she 's no the day and they tend to go up at the end . |
11 | They tend to go always to the top of the |
12 | They also do n't like wind rock so in a , an exposed position young plants do really need more staking than you 'd probably give a bush because they tend to rot off at the roots if they grow around a lot . |
13 | ‘ Moss stitch is best for ties otherwise they tend to curl up at the edges and look like a drain pipe . ’ |
14 | They tend to cater mainly for the under-sixties , although they are always willing to do everything they can to help the older widow too . |
15 | But after this it was United who took the initiative as they sought to get back into the game . |
16 | ‘ Although Tara never is really dark , ’ said Caspar as they stopped to look back at the great shining edifice outlined against the sky . |
17 | They want to go up to the aviary but I I ca n't get I ca n't get this buggy up there up that hill . |
18 | If they want to come along on the day and enjoy themselves , that 's fine ; we 're even providing a bouncy castle , so children can bounce for the rainforests at the Banbury walk . |
19 | They want to get on with the job , and are afraid of what a former Archbishop of York , Stuart Blanch , has described as ‘ analysis paralysis ’ setting in . |
20 | They delivered to his Downing Street home a list of what they want to get out of the recession . |
21 | They are saying they want to get back to the point where their hard work brought frequent , real , deep satisfaction . |
22 | Gascoigne enjoyed good support from Batty , who had another busy game in midfield and rarely allowed the opposition to establish the sort of rhythm they tried to set up at the start , when Boban and Suker tested Woods with low shots after some swift exchanges of passes had succeeded in outmanoeuvring England 's defence . |
23 | After driving to Rolls Wood Group [ Repair & Overhauls ] Ltd , they tried to get out of the car . |
24 | What do they expect to get out of the holiday ? |
25 | They seemed to give up in the second half , failed to mark anyone , gave Wallace ( who was running riot ) as much space as he wanted , and left Quinn up , waddling around ( usually into an offside position ) like a half-deflated barrage baloon ( with a tache ) . |
26 | They seemed to stretch back into the hillside as if they might , at some stage , cease to become manmade buildings of stone and wood and brick and become ancient caves ; tunnels that would penetrate deep into the earth 's core . |
27 | Soon the marching changed to slithering as the patrol hit a scree that propelled them forward as if they were on ball-bearings and they came tumbling headlong to the bottom . |
28 | When they 'd gone through into the lecture hall , I noticed the professor staring after them with a very odd look on his face — a stunned , frozen look . |
29 | I assaulted this position from every angle , ranging from thoughtful analyses of the male mid-life crisis , its nature and origins , to sweeping ad absurdum dismissals in which I demonstrated that by the same token Trish and Brian were equally culpable , because if they 'd gone out for the day I would have stayed at home and we would never have met in the first place . |
30 | The floorboards had n't snapped , as I 'd originally thought : they 'd gone down into the dock with Harry . |