Example sentences of "and [verb] [adv prt] to [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Standing stork-like and hanging on to the various bathroom fittings , she cleaned her teeth and made a reasonable toilet . |
2 | Owen drew breath and plunged back to the little group , still hemmed into a few yards of the pathway . |
3 | It occurred to her that most people , her former self included , would not walk away from an attack by a homicidal transvestite and sit down to a healthy breakfast . |
4 | We have been asked to give that up and to go over to the European Community system , with the European Court and majority voting — the shoe is pinching all the time . |
5 | A day to unwind and slow down to the leisurely pace of a Greek Cruise . |
6 | She has been voted the best assistant in the store by her colleagues , and goes on to the next leg of the competition , the district semi-finals on April 10th . |
7 | This central role for private property has a long history in European thought and goes back to the eighteenth-century notion of the social contract . |
8 | I bundled him into the care and zoomed off to the nearby University Herbarium with a whole leaf of the plant . |
9 | Once or twice a week Howard climbs into the station wagon and drives over to the little market town fifteen miles away . |
10 | At Bragança there was no response from the tower as we transmitted our intentions , landed and taxied in to the little apron . |
11 | A strangely-deserted sidewalk , Rex noted as he leapt out of the cab and stalked over to the fallen driver . |
12 | On seeking to patent his process , Castner discovered that a similar patent had been lodged in Germany by Karl Kellner and made over to the powerful Solvay Company in Belgium . |
13 | It is possible for teachers to keep a personal notebook which does not form part of the record and is not open to subject access , but if information is intended to be used officially and passed on to the next teacher it should be treated in the same way as the formal record . |
14 | The noise starts as a light tapping and builds up to a louder noise then stops suddenly . |
15 | Perhaps it is repetitive , but not for the sake of repetition , as each phrase carries a different emphasis and builds on to the prior phase for effect . |
16 | Then he crouched over it and squared up to an imaginary ball . |
17 | On the night of Friday , 8th September , the barrier was broken through and rescue workers wearing breathing apparatus were able to take hot food and drinks through to the trapped men . |
18 | The trouble was that the salt had permeated the walls and penetrated through to the other side , where beads of moisture coming through the plaster accounted for the detachment of the wallpaper , which by this time was hanging loose in a depressing and derelict manner . |
19 | Darlington was only the second date on the tour and got off to a bad start with a trip from Manchester through freezing fog arriving late and cold . |
20 | Duncan had been appalled to find that women had the vote ‘ down South ’ and got off to a shaky start in the motor trade when one of the local spivs conned him into thinking a Pina Colada was the latest model Ford built in Spain . |
21 | Well I 've been off work for a bit and got back to a massive 156 messages from the group ! |
22 | And I started another one and I said no I wo n't be able to this and got back to the other one and did the other one . . |
23 | If he 's been largely absent from the small screen for the last two years ( the South Bank Show spoof , Norbert Smith , was a revamp of an old idea ) , that 's because he 's unplugged the phone , taken time out with his two old drinking pals and got down to the serious business of mucking about . |
24 | As Vimla pirouetted , pulling her sari over her head in a parody of the Dance of the Seven Veils , Chaman Guru put down the cymbals and got down to the serious business of collecting money . |
25 | That may be half of what Darren paid for it , but in absolute terms it 's incredibly low depreciation over 40,000 and adds up to an excellent value motoring package . |
26 | Members of the committee visited the institution in rotation and reported back to the full committee . |
27 | On a nod from Richie , Patrick left them to it and moved over to the first tee . |
28 | She shut the trunk and moved on to a large cardboard box . |
29 | Channel 4 says the show recognises its audience may already have left sexual theory behind and moved on to the practical side of the subject . |
30 | No movement , no luck With a silent curse he extricated himself from the first trap and moved on to the next |