Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [adv] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Well they want to connect Mansfield then they want to connect eventually right up through Worksop and on out into the main lines . |
2 | In truth , Diana got on rather well with Adeane , who introduced her to many of the women she accepted as her ladies-in-waiting while she was an enthusiastic matchmaker , continually trying to pair off the difficult bachelor with unattached ladies . |
3 | Though Amiss was not entirely convinced that Trueman had been murdered , he did feel a sense of unease about the Admiral 's safety , so he was relieved to see that he seemed to be getting on rather better with his committee colleagues than the Sunday experiences had promised . |
4 | It was entirely grassless and a little soft underfoot , and it sloped rather badly down towards the sea by the midwicket boundary . |
5 | They had enjoyed my Watering-Place , a collection of interlinked sketches about Tunbridge Wells , lately published ( 'We 'd been rather badly off for books ' ) , and they had tales of other writers . |
6 | So really man 's costume changed very little , and in fact , apart of the cut of the jacket , and the type of hat you wore , it carried on right up to the present day . |
7 | But it must never be forgotten that the political , economic , cultural transformation of the world by European influences went on right down to 1945 and beyond . |
8 | If there was organised resistance , on their return charge , they would seek to carry on right back to the ford and over , picking up Hay , Wemyss and the prisoners on the way . |
9 | How do you erm , well , to get back into Lotus , type exit , and then enter Hang on right back to the spreadsheet . |
10 | The due processes having been gone through , there was nothing to prevent Hilda Machin being buried according to the rites of the Christian church whose doings she had cared remarkably little about during her lifetime . |
11 | How , exactly , is he going to let Serafin stumble upon the rooms that are waiting , as I imagine , somewhere rather close to where I am now sitting ? |
12 | They got on remarkably well as friends . |
13 | She is very loving and gets on extremely well with my grandchildren . |
14 | She still sees Bailey often , gets on extremely well with Catherine , Bailey 's current wife , and if he is out of town for long periods of time , they speak on the telephone . |
15 | Right , well I 've been waiting since er what is it twelve o'clock this morning , what on earth this question can be and I certainly did n't er come up with this possible , erm all I can say is that I have always got on extremely well with Tony and . |
16 | This alternative view , a member of a small family of related although differing views , follows on naturally enough from a consideration of Hume 's . |
17 | Deaf people perform rather less well in nearly all of these measures . |
18 | This choice had advantages of feasibility , but was not made without the reservation that advantages for the generic approach might lie in its ability to transcend client group stereotypes ; this seemed less of a problem , however , with elderly people , who fall rather less ambiguously into a self-contained category of client than some others . |
19 | Thus , though our surveys document a generalized view of the service as being at best only moderately effective , heads and teachers viewed individual members of the advisory team very differently , being unstinting in their praise of some , rather less so of others . |
20 | Incorporated practices are already permitted ( subject to local law requirements ) if their business is carried on only wholly outside England and Wales so long as all directors and shareholders are properly qualified lawyers ( ie barristers or solicitors or locally qualified advocates etc ) and the practice complies with the Overseas Practice Rules ( see above ) . |
21 | This policy of concentration has resulted in housing being provided in the form of large estates , built to uniform design by large building firms , tacked on somewhat incongruously to the older village core . |
22 | of which she sort of goes into every door , every door in Strathclyde , what a horrible thought , but in fact you know I thought maybe try and do something there , although I do n't always get on greatly well with , with the press and publicity people and the women in press and publicity are , are sort of start phrasing |
23 | All right , O.K. , he had been going on long enough on these lines . |
24 | Or even leave them on long enough for you to watch TV ? |
25 | I know it sounds unfeeling but to be blunt we ca n't go on much longer without any money coming in . |
26 | THE Queen has always liked Fergie and gets on much better with her than she does with her other daughter-in-law , Princess Diana . |
27 | The one good thing was that I began to get on much better with my children . |
28 | Murdock stayed in Cornwall for about 19 years and got on much better with the miners than Watt had done . |
29 | I got on much better with one of the corporals , Corporal House , who was the cook . |
30 | ‘ I 'm sure that we 'll be able to get on much better in the future . ’ |