Example sentences of "[adv] [adv prt] in the " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ He 's dead — dropped right down in the middle of the cake-tasting . |
2 | The first chain starts off right down in the Antarctic , a few hundred kilometres from the South Pole . |
3 | I am glad now she did lose her budgie — and find it — because if she had n't she would n't have seen my puppy trapped right down in the hollow tree . |
4 | A bath safety-rail made of chromium-plated tubular steel makes getting in and out of the bath much easier and safer ; and a bath seat with a back support eliminates the need to sit right down in the bath ( see Chapter 12 ) . |
5 | In , fatal cases this pseudo- membrane can extend right from the top of the respiratory track here down into bronchi , and you can get these enormous casts of mucrotic material er , starting in the pharynx and working their way right down in the bronchi . |
6 | I have I tell you I 've done that before now and then that one ends up right down in the bottom corner |
7 | Now right down in the corner , bearing in mind my parents ' garden shall we say is there and the field height is there |
8 | The ‘ Sean Astin digs up a caveman and he fits right in in the Valley ’ plot does n't add to the suburban dumbnation routines but rather reworks the Eighties ' ‘ innocents abroad in America ’ genre ( eg anything from Starman to Crocodile Dundee ) . |
9 | Somewhere down in the depths , he felt certain , lay Marius Steen 's gun , thrown away after the murder was committed . |
10 | I know which it is but it 's somewhere down in the corner where your brother used to live that corner down there Harry somewhere down there . |
11 | I wished I could help him then ; he looked so down in the mouth hunched up by the stove . |
12 | ‘ Everyone 's so down in the dumps and poor . |
13 | He had never seen Karr looking so down in the mouth . |
14 | ‘ Why so down in the mouth ? ’ asked her host , returning with a tea-tray . |
15 | That erm , made me laugh because he said to his secretary erm you know , I I honestly do n't think your time is she is so down in the mouth . |
16 | It you are constantly down in the dumps over the price of fleecewear then this may be the answer to your prayers . |
17 | Deeper down in the chest , where Tod does n't often burrow , the women get appreciably younger and are to be seen in things like shorts and swimwear . |
18 | It seemed all over in the 63rd minute when Clough , a few yards outside the penalty area , volleyed a headed clearance instantly into the roof of the net before Hardwick could move a muscle . |
19 | Though I must admit , we 'll be glad when it 's all over in the Far East and they can come back safe and sound . ’ |
20 | The collapse of the Empire in 1814 and the fall of Napoleon I brought about a dispersal of the Imperial House and although the return of Napoleon from Elba in 1815 led to a restoration of the family fortunes , it was all over in the Hundred Days . |
21 | My charm wins them all over in the end . |
22 | Personal communications services are bursting out all over in the US and three Baby Bells this week announced plans for trials of new services . |
23 | His tools were all over in the cafeteria , there had to be something that he could use to open himself up . |
24 | It was all over in the 10th . |
25 | You would be better off in the personnel department . |
26 | In the long run the West could help Russia and Eastern Europe more by opening its markets to their produce than by handing over cash — and would immediately make itself a lot better off in the process ( see page 50 ) . |
27 | Perhaps he might he better off in the works office ? |
28 | Even once a predator has found a school , the prey fish are better off in the school than they would be alone , as has been proved by the following experiment . |
29 | ‘ You 'd be much better off in the dining-room , ’ Alexandra said to the mice . |
30 | If society 's resource could be used to make more output , even the poor might be better off in the long run . |