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

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1 Later on each of the souls pouring out of Narnia on Doomsday looks at Aslan as it comes through the Door-way of Death — to be saved if it loves , destroyed if it hates .
2 As certain areas of Great Britain , for example , take on some of the characteristics of divided societies , the focus of this study also has a relevance , of increasing proportion , outside the province and beyond what many residents in Northern Ireland might see as most directly pertinent to them .
3 Dealing with people came naturally and was in many ways the most important part of the job , but there was more that could come only with experience , and Charles was there to pass on some of the things he had learned over thirty-three years , some of them the hard way .
4 William Parker takes on some of the baritone material with unabashed lyricism and plangency , leaving Elly Ameling to bring refreshing charm and beauty of tone to the soprano Mélodies .
5 This urban base once distinguished these movements from such parties in Europe , although extreme-right phenomena there in the 1980s have ( with exceptions ) now taken on some of the distributional features of the British extreme right 's support .
6 After the collapse and division of the NF , the BNP began in late 1989 and early 1990 to take on some of the former 's street-presence .
7 ‘ After I win , I 'll take on some of the opponents Eubank has beaten , and do a better job , ’ said Piper .
8 The reason for this lies in a theory called secondary reinforcement which says that the praise will become associated with the more powerful extra reward and take on some of the strong reinforcing properties of that reward .
9 Whitehead Mann has taken on some of the highest salaried job searches in Britain , comparable with Russell Reynolds ' recruiting of Bob Bauman for Beecham ; an assignment on behalf of a major British company looking for a chief executive to run their operations in Australia earned the firm £333 000 , according to the popular press ( on the basis that the successful candidate was to be paid an annual salary approaching £1m . ) .
10 The aim is to ease the stress of house-buying by giving advice and taking on some of the workload .
11 Father even allows quite unrelated youngsters to join the family group if they will take on some of the work of baby-carrying .
12 The stations of the South African Boer Republics , themselves huge concessions to the modern world which the Boers would originally much rather have done without , took on some of the dour , flinty character of Dutch Reformed Calvinism .
13 Since some of the restrictions have been taken off , team members are beginning to take on some of the old supervisors tasks — requesting stores , requesting maintenance , in general , being more responsible .
14 The issuing house will underwrite the issue ( i.e. agree to buy up any unsold shares ) for a fee , and will generally pass on some of the risk to sub-underwriters , who are usually large institutional investors .
15 And er guys started to go down that to the twenty foot level where they were picked up by an inflatable off the standby boat .
16 With a parallel interface all eight can be sent together with one bit going down each of the eight wires .
17 Everyone in the crowd was bowing back , and the waves of motion proceeded down each of the streets like ripples out across a pool .
18 Air now passes down this to the mouth of the fish which is connected to tiny openings in the parchment cocoon .
19 You 'd put your hundred and twenty five thousand pounds down , you 'd also put down half of the jointly owned property because you could have dealt with that while you were alive and you 'll end up paying large amounts of inheritance tax .
20 At the time of her arrest , Dai Qing was working on a series of studies entitled Modern Chinese Intellectuals : From Liang Qichao to Fang Lizhi , in order , as she put it , to fill in some of the ‘ memory holes ’ of the history of the Chinese Communist Party .
21 ‘ A botanical illustrator who 's retired here is filling in some of the gaps in our plant and tree records .
22 Russians are filling in some of the gaps in their lives by seeking out anything that was forbidden or hard to get in Soviet times .
23 A second year of practical experience on another mixed farm , together with concentrated reading , will confirm and consolidate the earlier lessons ; local day-release courses in special aspects of practical farming can fill in some of the gaps .
24 Mr Vinct brought in some of the ‘ Daily Service ’ folk to see me and to tell me about their work .
25 I am making the assumption that Kirov will be able to fill in some of the blanks once we come up with a workable number … probably no more than three .
26 I 'll bring in some of the kids who were there and Jonesy can imitate the preacher . ’
27 Without even trespassing into any of these more perilous aspects of pre-war street life , the Mass Observation study The Pub and the People ( 1943 ) filled in some of the detail of the rowdy bonhomie of the working-class weekend , and the ‘ high point of mass drunkenness ’ during the exodus from the northern towns to Blackpool .
28 Right before I fill in some of the details on this again an important point to grasp coming up .
29 Words for strong stemming might be filtered through a table of exceptions which are not to be stemmed ( " organism " , " organist " etc ) Strong stemming is an economical but crude way of automatically bringing in some of the halo of see also terms which surround many search words .
30 ‘ I think Guy might fill in some of the background , ’ Scott-Scobie agreed .
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