Example sentences of "and [adv] [verb] [adv prt] [prep] [det] " in BNC.

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1 He 'd loll in his chair as he was doing then , and suddenly come out with some remark that made everyone else uncomfortable .
2 They have tightened up the rules on availabilty for work and only pay out to those genuinely entitled to the money .
3 They have tightened up the rules on availabilty for work and only pay out to those genuinely entitled to the money .
4 However , looking back , and especially looking back after all the interlacements of Volumes Two and Three , one might well think that besides an image of life ‘ the Road ’ has crept up to being an image of Providence .
5 Keep both legs taut and straight and gently push up with both arms .
6 Then the range of speeds that can be measured is very wide ; fractional Doppler shifts as small as 10 -15 can be measured and thus speeds down to less than — far lower than those normally encountered in fluid dynamics — though not all systems are capable of this .
7 I 'm to walk along Crane Street from the city end , turn right at the first corner , right again at the first comer and just keep on like that . ’
8 Put yourself in the position of a financial adviser , for the couple that you see , these are all theoretical couples obviously , theoretical individuals , and just jot down on this the sort t .
9 It 's easy to look at these young hooligans on the street , as they are perceived by so many , without understanding why they are like it , and I think it would help everyone to understand , and maybe we could have some action to work towards supplying the need for these youngsters , because I belief if something could be done for them when they 're sixteen and just starting out on this erm sort of sub-culture life that they get into so quickly , if people could give them maximum help at this stage then they could grow into being responsible erm satisfied adults .
10 And when it 's still green if you get a little knife and just slit down like that , a sap comes out , all
11 the six million erm U K pension cost is n't ongoing level and just going back to that er post-retirement medical benefits it would n't be material I mean definition material can be er something less than five percent of profits .
12 Was ninety percent of the people there very law abiding and just got on with own lives , and ten percent that caused the problems it kept re kept sh showing its head because of these .
13 The third sister , Mrs. Price has made an imprudent marriage as she has allowed her feeling to overtake her judgement and finally ends up with little money and too many children .
14 Despite her criticism of their dancing they knew she cared for them and always stepped in in any family crisis :
15 Restrictive convenants are the most common legal restriction imposed on the purchaser and often go back over many years .
16 There was n't a single man who was n't there all spruced up and well turned out at this awkward hour .
17 The husband and wife retire from their work and immediately move down to some retirement haven in deepest Cornwall .
18 When his racing days are over , probably around the ripe old age of four , PJ will take his well-earned retirement with fellow pets Jessie the golden retriever and Bobby the cat at the family home in Hornchurch … and maybe catch up on some of that lost sleep !
19 I stuck it for about a year and then moved on to another , slightly better hotel to do the same thing for marginally more money .
20 The man replaced the blanket , and then moved on to another corpse .
21 Allen looked about and then scampered on to another branch .
22 Finally , I thought I 'd call Connors and then catch up on some sack .
23 We were going to say hullo to you , and then walk round to that little island — it 's called Seal Island — I ca n't say the Gaelic name but Mrs McDougall told me that 's what it means .
24 ‘ The Gruagach sent me here , ’ began Caspar , and stopped , and then went on with more assurance , ‘ they sent me along to see if you can provide a — well , I do n't know what you 'd call it really .
25 For he was acutely aware that Ubaldo Valesio had waited in that bar , used that phone , and then walked out of that door , got into his car and never come back .
26 When the trade unions established the Labour Party as a parliamentary voice for organised labour , they likewise established the ‘ duty to win ’ — to achieve power in Parliament and then to hang on to that power come what may , or put more bluntly , regardless of socialist principle .
27 And then writing back to this contact i either in New York or in Virginia or wherever it was , saying that it th they would give him the dimensions of the roof , that they could tell him exactly how many slates they 'd need to cover it .
28 ‘ A fox would cross here and then steal back to this side and make a line of his own through the forest . ’
29 And I think he 's going to work out the other two and then go on to this forget the name of it at the moment , this bank
30 Yeah right so go down and see him , and then go over to that place near Red Row and see if they 'll cut that wood for you we can see it 's just gone half past two now , I want a ball game on the fence post
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