Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [adv prt] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Phelps and I picked up one of his colleagues at two o'clock this morning , driving suspiciously slowly down the A614 near Ollerton .
2 The nationalists as a party capable of national leadership — that is to say the VNQDD — had admittedly been destroyed but while the ICP was not much better off the difference was that the VNQDD never really recovered from French repression .
3 Gus Dudgeon : ‘ I was sitting back in my office and the internal phone rang and it was Tony Visconti , whose office was literally just down the hall .
4 If so , take a pair of tweezers and GENTLY easy out the offending bit of yarn .
5 This meant we could walk much further up the valley without re-tracing .
6 This would entail a view of nature as organic and ecological , rather than mechanistic ; an interpretation of lower forms of organisation in terms of higher ones , as well as vice versa ; an acknowledgment of sentience much further down the organisational ladder than is at present commonly imagined ; a biocentric ethic ; and a holistic approach to knowledge .
7 Even in the merchant activities of the outports , however , a great number of people were taking shares in trading ventures , and from much further down the social scale than was the case with the East India Company , only 1.6 per cent of whose investors held less than £100 in 1764 .
8 It could have been made by the indigenous people immediately after the conquest , or alternatively features such as the teeth could have been cut much later on the head .
9 If I were to tell you that this record puts a dayglo platform DM so far up the mule 's rectum that its entrails squish through its clenched teeth , I do n't think that I could be justly accused of exaggeration .
10 A little transistor with a tin spike for an aerial was useless so far up the valley .
11 He considered buying a cake to eat , but while he was thinking about it he kept on walking , and thought it would look stupid to turn back so far up the street , so he did n't , though at the thought his stomach suddenly rumbled .
12 I 'm so far up the creek myself that when they throw the book at me it 'll be the whole library .
13 ‘ She is now so far up the beach and has suffered so much damage that it would be physically impossible to get her off , ’ said Orkney 's Marine Pollution Officer , Captain Bob Sclater .
14 Once back in the ops room , I laid the boy flat on his back , so far down the mattress that his dropped foot hung over the edge at the bottom , just as I had seen the Australian nurse do when I watched her during her London visit the previous year .
15 It was quite unheard of for the White House to be so intimately involved in the appointment process so far down the administrative hierarchy .
16 But as it was I travelled only so far down the ramp and stuck there with my head and shoulders protruding into the street .
17 There is no ultimate theory , but there is an infinite sequence of theories that are such that any particular class of observations can be predicted by taking a theory sufficiently far down the chain .
18 Where it occurs much lower down a recovery is unlikely , and the accident should be put down either to the failure to maintain a safe airspeed at low altitudes , or to bad planning leading to a situation from which a crash is almost unavoidable .
19 There will not be much re-nationalisation , for example , and the top rate of tax will not be as high as it was under Mr Healey ( although it will start much lower down the scale ) .
20 From the road , Leck Fell declines in a mile-long slope to Ease Gill and its main concentration of potholes are reached in a ten-minute walk ; others , much lower down the slope , form part of the Ease Gill cave system and are too far to be visited if Gragareth is also in the itinerary .
21 Sometimes they would read our palms , finishing by giving them a little scratch that signified they were available — one scratch twenty douros , two scratches fifty douros and so on up the scale from an ‘ in and out ’ in the toilets or a ‘ short time ’ in a back room to a whole night in the brothel , with champagne and bath .
22 The syllabuses are labelled Class I , Class 2 and so on up the ladder .
23 The group of circles formed a genus , and the genera could similarly be arranged in circles , and so on up the scale to higher groupings .
24 And 6 per cent is better than 5 , 7 per cent better than 6 , and so on up the gradual , continuous series .
25 There was a time when five-star hotels were assumed to be better than four-star and so on down the line .
26 ‘ In those days the boys went into the church , the army , and so on down the family , and it fell to Charlie to go to the colonies .
27 Then take one step backwards again ( to the ‘ a ’ node ) and down the next route forwards ( to the ‘ c ’ node ) , and so on down the first route from each node , until the end of the graph is again reached ( i.e. the complete candidate string ljaclc ) .
28 Directors , whether of social services or in the voluntary field , are notoriously cautious in the light of committee opinion ; so are assistant directors and managers , and so on down the line .
29 This means , in a group of say ten hens , that the ‘ boss ’ hen is dominant to all the other nine hens , the second hen is subordinate to the boss hen but dominates the other eight , and so on down the hierarchy .
30 And so on down the years the litany of excitement and drama has continued .
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