Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [vb past] [noun prp] " in BNC.
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1 | LC expressed levels of E-cadherin as high as those expressed by the most intensely stained KC . |
2 | For example , some colleges will offer only EFL while others , mainly those in the adult education sector , concentrate on highly subsidized ESOL courses . |
3 | Bradshaw rather unwisely greeted McLean 's arrival in the ring by nutting him . |
4 | At half-back Richard Hill is the man with the reputation against the less highly rated Rob Glenister . |
5 | I saw it and obviously so did Arnold , but nobody else could have . |
6 | The old man replied with a toothless grin , yelling in thickly accented Bajan : ‘ You man , back back . ’ |
7 | For so long dedicated Microsoft Windows users had very few decent database packages to choose from . |
8 | This must be the watchword of the Western democracies who have so painfully and yet so necessarily dismantled Saddam Hussein 's war machine , at such a cost in lives and scarce resources . |
9 | So greatly did Keir take us into her confidence that , by the end of the evening , we felt like old muckers . |
10 | My torch failed , and I found my hands too cold to fix it , so just followed Charlie 's light from stance to stance . |
11 | Surprise that he should know her sister so well , so soon made Claudia lift her head . |
12 | Lancaster only just tolerated Douglas 's interference , partly for old time 's sake and partly because Lancaster admired Kirk for daring to slight Hollywood 's conservatives by openly using blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo on Spartacus . |
13 | My dad was n't a tall man and it only just covered Quigley 's enormous willy . |
14 | The delay in publication of the original book would probably have been much longer had Medvedev not given the manuscript to Andrei Sakharov to read in October 1988 . |
15 | The news went unreported in the Press , so quickly had Chapman become football 's forgotten man . |
16 | And the NZRFU councillors who so quickly criticised South Africa must hope that none of the leading New Zealand players show positive on drug-testing — if and when that is introduced as thoroughly as New Zealand require from South Africa . |
17 | I only once heard Tom complain bitterly about George . |
18 | Only once did Norwich break their stranglehold , midway through the first-half , when John Polston moved up to rattle a post . |
19 | Only once did Norwich break their stranglehold , midway through the first-half , when John Polston moved up to rattle a post . |
20 | Only once did Kinnock appear out of his separate cabin in the leader 's aircraft in order to talk to reporters , and that was when he thanked them for a birthday card . |
21 | Only once did Tess try to get closer to her husband . |
22 | Bath had a good long look at the videos and soon saw that little variations of this move could break opposition defences just as easily as the blasting back-row scrum moves with which Australia had devastated England when they so mistakenly toured Australia last year . |
23 | ‘ I only ever loved Luke , ’ Susan said . |
24 | I only ever loved Luke . |
25 | Ready also launched SNX , a set of network executives supporting multifarious protocols including TCP/IP , FDDI , SNMP , SLIP , ARP , Ethernet , Telnet and FTP . |
26 | Ready also launched SNX , a set of network executives which support multifarious protocols including TCP/IP , FDDI , SNMP , SLIP , ARP , Ethernet , Telnet and FTP . |
27 | Only later did Oliver Michaels come back with the sobering news that the hotel was strangely full of policemen , that there was no breakfast to be had save for coffee and muffins , without a trek to the Albion Hotel , and moreover there was thought to be something odd about Sir Thomas 's death which no one would specify . |
28 | Only later did Sukarno reveal the full venom of his animosity ( ‘ While I was taking hammer blows on the head his entire underground effort can be summed up by saying he sat quietly and safely away somewhere listening to a clandestine radio ’ ) . |
29 | It is worth recalling that on the eve of the French Revolution the French peasant 's expectancy is thought to have been rather below that of the Indian in 1881 ; so far had Europe already come in the ninety years before 1880 . |
30 | She had a tiny mouth ( ‘ like a hen 's arse' was Grunte 's privately expressed opinion ) and had , because of her aggressive plainness , so far escaped Grunte 's ‘ paternal ’ — or should it be ‘ fraternal ’ — sexual attentions . |