Example sentences of "[be] [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | It may seem that the movement just discernible towards " spirituality " would be wholly to the benefit of religion , yet it is not necessarily so . |
2 | Pension arrangements will be wholly in the private sector . |
3 | They are likely to be somewhere on the following continuum |
4 | So I must be somewhere on the edge of — of Steel City . |
5 | The weather was beautiful and those who were fortunate to know that his special was operating and were able to be somewhere along the route were fortunate to share a most attractive experience . |
6 | Seems to be somewhere along the road or otherwise your gon na get nowhere nobody . |
7 | A relaxed horse will be somewhere between the two , with little tension in the head , neck and tail , maybe a rested hindleg , but still showing interest in his environment . |
8 | We aimed to be somewhere between the Daily Mirror and the Daily Mail . |
9 | The predominant over-view in this Department was that Television held a special kind of mystique ; that writing and producing drama for it demanded special levels of skill which were to be somewhere between the scopes of the Theatre and the Cinema . |
10 | it was a cro , I tell you what , we were playing something tonight , I think it was the last thing before you stopped , and I kept thinking any minute now it 's gon na be Somewhere Over the Rainbow |
11 | But then it was this I thought any minute it 's gon na be Somewhere over the Rainbow . |
12 | You ca n't do that , because unless everyone is identical , the average will always be somewhere around the middle . |
13 | So once I had passed through the obligatory outskirts of post-war , multi-storey housing estates and entered a labyrinth of blackened buildings in canyon-like streets with traffic jammed solid , I knew I had to be somewhere near the town centre . |
14 | He had n't been dead for very long — my earlier estimate of around six hours will be somewhere near the mark . |
15 | Many pitched their suggested figure at a level considered to be somewhere near the price of an average house mortgage . |
16 | Ah erm tt Vicki what 's that casino called that used to be somewhere near the erm Boys Brigade place ? |
17 | Prices vary enormously for group holidays but a typical price would be somewhere in the region of £25 per person per day . |
18 | He must be somewhere in the district . ’ |
19 | Unfortunately I am unable to give you a firm price for the software as we have not yet completed the development stage , but it will be somewhere in the region of 65 . |
20 | I suppose it must be somewhere in the flat … ’ |
21 | It was in keeping with the determination of the man , and he 'd probably only held off because those bobbies had to be somewhere in the vicinity . |
22 | But there 's no evidence that a penny has been actually paid — or that Varsov International , whose headquarters appear to be somewhere in the Caribbean , even possesses £5 million . " |
23 | You must have guessed I 'd be somewhere in the hotel . ’ |
24 | The telephone number would be somewhere in the house and in the morning Alain would be at his office and not likely to answer the phone . |
25 | He had no idea where he was , except that it must be somewhere in the wilds of Wales , well hidden from any possibility of rescue ; and he took his first unwilling look about him in the conviction that captivity could mean nothing better than solitude , close confinement and squalor . |
26 | The county council would appear to be somewhere in the middle , based on the range of views that have been submitted to this E I P . |
27 | The county council appear to be somewhere in the middle , er at around forty one thousand er two hundred dwellings . |
28 | So what we say is that if you took all of our products all our ads they would be somewhere in the region of six hundred pounds . |
29 | would be somewhere in the region of a hundred and fifteen pounds . |
30 | There should really be somewhere in the building a place which tells you who is in the building at what times . |