Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] the [noun prp] " in BNC.

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1 To add some sort of spice , someone has had the bright idea of bringing on the JB Horns .
2 There would be no one to carry on the Drennan name , no one to inherit his land .
3 Later on , the winners were joined by top pop group , Londonbeat , who sang their latest single , 'You bring on the Sun' .
4 Bring on the Pimm 's because Paul Weller is back .
5 Bring on the Pimm 's and let's have a sing-song around the old Hammond because Paul Weller is back .
6 There was still an hour to wait so the Feldwebel suggested that we should have some coffee .
7 The Labour Party 's part in bringing down the Chamberlain Government in May 1940 was recognized by the central roles allotted to Labour Ministers in Churchill 's Coalition Government .
8 The Treaty of Rome will cover only the EC ; the other pillars will be governed by new treaties .
9 The same procedure was then applied using only the Pugh score as independent variable to predict outcome at six weeks ( Pugh model ) .
10 Say , you have a problem with a youth , they could do you out this plan that would sound very good on paper — bring in the social workers , bring in the DHSS and juvenile liaison .
11 During one of the psychological talks , delivered to an audience of eleven , the members filled in the Wilson-Patterson Scale of Conservatism ( Wilson and Patterson , 1968 ) .
12 It has been possible for some time to cruise down the Nile , or stay in some of the jewelled and painted palaces of Moghul India , or walk along the Great Wall of China .
13 The South-West , who beat London last year , have made a total of three changes , choosing the Plymouth wing Steve Walklin instead of Peter Blackett of Bath , and bringing in the Bath lock Nigel Redman in place of his club-mate John Morrison .
14 We took a two-hour tour of South London with Eva drinking Guinness and hanging out the window cheering as we passed down the Old Kent Road , stopping beside the famous site of Dr Lal 's surgery and the dance hall of love , where Mum met Dad and fell .
15 Ten years from now I 'm gon na be 52 , and I 'm not going to be able to go down the Hacienda without looking a complete prat .
16 Albert Popple had decided to go down the Lamb and Flag after walking round the block several times .
17 He has , he has since the Gulf War .
18 At the head of the parade was a blue banner bearing the words ‘ Civil Rights March ’ , which had been carried on the Coalisland — Dungannon march .
19 A lorry thundered down the Woolwich Road towards Greenwich , making conversation temporarily impossible .
20 Participants at the " peace summit " thus included only the ANC 's main rival , the Zulu-based Inkatha Freedom Party , and some representatives from various minority groups .
21 They were driving down the Boulevard St Germain towards the river ; the Seine 's fast-flowing current , parted hard against the piers of the bridges , seemed to Miranda 's eyes to capture the pace and temperament of this city where she felt so happy , where she wanted to stay .
22 One evening in mid-April , Dr Jaffery and I were walking down the Chandni Chowk heading towards the doctor 's rooms in the Ghazi-ud-Din Medresse .
23 ‘ Here , ’ said Stephen Brandt to life , walking down the Strand at eleven o'clock the next dampish morning and moving his lips without a sound .
24 Successive waves spread through the Canadian archipelago to northwest Greenland , moved down the Mackenzie River , and crossed eastward to Labrador and southern Greenland .
25 Louis moved down the Rhine by ship from Worms , Charles with his horsemen travelled overland across the Hunsrück ( " a difficult route " on which the benefits of hard training showed ) , to meet up at Koblenz on 18 March .
26 The news of the day was that British tanks had got across the Irrawaddy near Meiktila , having come down the Chindwin valley .
27 Like London in the nineteen-forties , Paris seemed to have assembled every uniform and race loyal to the Allied cause ; and what variety , what colour the Moroccans and the Senegalese , Annamites and Malgaches , presented as they mingled down the Champs Elysées with immaculate cavalry officers , Foreign Legionnaires , kilted Highlanders , pretty nursing sisters , and now a sprinkling of American flyers from the Lafayette Squadron !
28 Whichever age you encounter down the Everton trail , you come up with marvellous contributors to the club 's roll of honour .
29 Stair , turning to see what was happening , was borne away from Neil , who was himself carried down the Haymarket by a shouting throng — the rugger match had triggered off an impromptu riot as well .
30 In 1878 Frobenius showed that relinquishing the commutative law of multiplication adds only the quaternions to the list , and using algebraic topology Bott , Milnor and Kervaire showed , in 1957 , that relinquishing in addition the associative law adds only the Cayley numbers .
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