Example sentences of "[prep] [pron] [adv] again " in BNC.

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1 Robbins insisted that the Committee had not intended to erect a barrier of that kind , and deplored Crosland 's establishment of ‘ a rigid line between them never again to be crossed ’ .
2 Do n't hang around school waiting for me ever again .
3 Nicholson failed to make a name for himself once again , though because of some inspired controversy he had at least achieved a wider circle of critics .
4 After a minute or two he made a wide turn and flew towards me once again .
5 By way of signing off I 'll try to slip a selection of them through again .
6 Twenty years later my plan is to move most of them back again .
7 She thinks of Dulé , for he beckons to her : they will cross the channel to Oualie and be with him , perhaps , as he has asked , the three of them together again , with Roukoubé as well , and Sycorax will recover .
8 She would never be frightened of them ever again ,
9 I did n't want to return to the village : I wanted to stay here in one of the huts and not see any of them ever again .
10 Surely the best answer is to get most of them out again as quickly as possible .
11 From that time on , I never spoke to my mother of my father-never again , till I was eighteen leaving for France , to study there …
12 Sheridan , universally unpopular and having made a boorish fool of himself yet again , looked predictably furious .
13 And , ’ she tacked on , ‘ it is my profound hope that I shall never see any of you ever again . ’
14 He did not begin to think of her constantly again until the journey back north .
15 He did not begin to think of her constantly again until the journey back north .
16 Immediately after Christmas he obtained permission to return to Aquitaine and we next hear of him once again at war with Geoffrey .
17 The two of us together again ! ’
18 Of course it will mean a drop in salary but you need n't worry about the extra stress that goes with promotion because there wo n't be any promotion for you ever again .
19 With guests including Opera Restor 'd , Musica Antiqua of London and the American ensemble The Musicians of Swanne Alley running alongside events for children , illustrated lectures , walks , talks and afternoon tea concerts , there will be something for you once again at the 1992 Festival .
20 She wanted to cuddle against him , to feel his body warm and aroused against hers once again , but instinct told her that things could not be as simple as that .
21 like to look after my mother , er she was one , and she died now erm she died two years ago , I think she was one of the first to go and er , the other one they fetched him out of the street the chap then they corresponded with him up to the war but , but after that , they , I do n't know whether they stopped writing because of the war , I do n't know , but they never , never got in touch with them never again so
22 Tonight , she told Central South she wanted nothing to do with them ever again .
23 ‘ All I meant was that I find it hard to imagine myself setting up home with someone else again . ’
24 The last time I saw you , you 'd decided never to let anyone work with you here again .
25 The only thing I could do was discuss with her yet again the best way to express our case .
26 ‘ I 'm not milling about , I 'm not lurking and I 'm not amassing , ’ Otley said vehemently as Nigel pleaded with him yet again .
27 The hon. Gentleman has been consistent in his opposition to the Community and , if he stands his ground — as I have no doubt he will — in due course those on his Front Bench will agree with him once again .
28 Red Nose Day is with us once again .
29 After he had finished attending to the roses , he went round them once again , cutting a bunch of long-stemmed buds to take with him to the clinic , along with Edna 's parcel of clean laundry .
30 The same irony is enriched and plangently deepened in another fine poem by Tate of the same year , in which once again the many Virgilian echoes point to a deeper affinity — with the fable of the Aeneid as making more sense than he can find anywhere else , for the historical predicament that the American Southerner has inherited and must make sense of .
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