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

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1 They moved on through a silent , sleeping village , only a few plumes of black smoke giving any sign of life .
2 He ate a gargantuan meal , starting with some plovers ' eggs they had overlooked earlier , working on through a few roast geese with a brace or so of ducklings on the side , and ending with one half of a cheese and a couple of bowls of fruit .
3 Prowling on through the foul open area , wrapped in such pleasant fantasies , I almost failed to see the furtive movement on the edge of my vision .
4 Although Hinrich and Senta Medau are no longer with us , their work and inspiration live on through the second generation , while in this country the Medau Society celebrates its 35th Anniversary in 1987 .
5 The exhibition continues into twentieth-century painting with works of Futurism , the Cubist-Futurist Russians , American Cubism , Precisionism represented by Charles Demuth and Charles Sheeler and thence on through the various transformations that the art of this century has seen .
6 We wandered past the Delhi Gate and on through the crumbling streets of Old Delhi ; as we went , Pakeezah stared sadly around her .
7 Before that time , knowledge and wisdom were passed on through the spoken word , as they still are in much of the world .
8 Patronage did not die out with industrialization ; it lived on through the honorific offices of county clubs and national bodies .
9 THE pathetic objections voiced by the Lords to allowing peerages to pass on through the female line really rammed home to me how outmoded this institution is .
10 The trial ground on through the long hot summer in Pretoria .
11 With a path to walk on through the long ‘ now ’ of summer .
12 ‘ Where are we going ? ’ she asked , as the car moved smoothly down the road and then on through the small village just beyond .
13 I could see what went on through the two front windows despite the 4p off Whiskas stickers , and I have to admit I was impressed .
14 I told the stationer I 'd be back for my parcel , and wandered on through the cold sunny streets .
15 The picture speaks for itself , on through the 29 generations .
16 As the recession 's gone on through the eighties and enters the nineties , we can see that the number of single households , households with just one person , is increasing rapidly .
17 He urged them on through the mounting waves until they too reached the Rebecca , and he was able to ram one hole , fill it with pitch , then another , and another , round the hull beneath the overhang of the bows , in a rain of missiles , with fire sizzling around him , and his fellow fighters hanging on , hoping for the moment when the timbers would be ablaze .
18 By this time Paddy seemed to be quite enjoying himself as we trotted on through the silent , thistle-filled fields edged with woods .
19 So Tallis described what she could sense , and then they moved on through the silent and deathly place , watching the dying and the dead with caution .
20 They walked on through the driving rain .
21 It was at about this time that the Duke of Devonshire created the splendid avenue of lime trees which started beside some large houses — Afton House ; Bolton House and Linden House — on the south side of Chiswick High Road , and extending down to the northern boundary of Chiswick House grounds , sweeping on through the magnificent wrought-iron gates , at the end of Hogarth Lane , and continuing through the gardens to the house .
22 The Inspector pushed on through the unfamiliar undergrowth , ‘ 1965 to 1972 , Priest in charge , St James 's Malta ; 1973 to 1980 , Priest in charge , St George 's Monte Regia ; 1982 to 1987 , Vicar of St Ermyntrude Warnford Parva ; 1987 , Rector , St Benet Oldfield with St Nicholas Nether Oldfield . ’
23 It was the end of a trail which had had its beginnings in those first rumblings of Henry Fairlie against the Establishment and Malcolm Muggeridge against the Monarchy ; a trail that had led on through the Angry Young Men and all the resentments sown by Suez , through the heyday of affluence , through all the mounting impatience with convention , tradition and authority that had been marked by the teenage revolution and the CND and the New Morality , through the darkening landscape of security scandals and What 's Wrong With Britain and the rising aggression and bitterness of the satirists , in ever more violent momentum .
24 Rupert Hall 's short history of the college guides us through the years leading up to this event , then on through the 20th century to recent times .
25 For mile after mile the car ran on through the shadowy rubber groves where the straight-trunked trees with herringbone scars and metal latex cups stretched unendingly into the distance on either side of the road .
26 It has been suggested that starting in mid Devonian times and continuing on through the Carboniferous , a mid European ocean of uncertain width extended roughly along the line of the English Channel and then on eastwards into the European continent .
27 ‘ Do n't worry , ’ he said , skipping on through the amateur boxing and back around to the broadcast channels again .
28 She too exhibits both a fascination and a scepticism with regard to structuralist theories of the text , manifest in Thru as a healthy mistrust of theory whenever it becomes over-systematic .
29 Only the Russians and some German Social Democrats keep banging on about a neutral Germany .
30 For instance , he observed expansions of English foreign trade on about a 50-year cycle from the 1790s to 1810 , from 1842 to 1873 , and from 1893 to 1914 , each separated by periods of consolidation .
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