Example sentences of "[am/are] [adv] [adv prt] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 I am besides about to be deserted by my husband , who is to go this next week to Rome to prepare the way for the Brownings .
2 ‘ Rotherham are right up at the top of the table and they are there on merit .
3 Only when the opposition are right back on the defence or for free kicks .
4 ‘ I am sorry madam ’ he called out , over my shoulder , ‘ We are right out of cracked eggs today . ’
5 And people like me , who prefer to communicate with words while flinging on random bits of any ‘ look ’ that happens to fit and be cleanish at the same time , are right out in the cold .
6 Most of us are somewhere in between : we do n't physically attack people but we verbally assault them ; we stand by while others suffer — like the Parisian coffee-drinkers in the Champs-Elysees story ; we 're uncharitable , unhelpful , and often unnecessarily territorial .
7 Most of the fen drains for most of the time are somewhere in between these two extremes making the whole business a little undecided .
8 Sales are somewhere in between since although there is a structured sales department , individual salesmen operate much of the time on their own .
9 Following the left bank of the river , you are rarely out of sight of the water .
10 It you are constantly down in the dumps over the price of fleecewear then this may be the answer to your prayers .
11 ‘ Sunday : Kids are suddenly back at school tomorrow and have to be labelled .
12 With the Tories elected for a fourth successive term , the politics of the opposition are obviously up for radical examination .
13 I will give you gifts so that you are better off for ever … " )
14 In some respects , we are better off without them .
15 First it is a game which creates wealth through the process of production exchange and all players in the game ( i.e. those supplying labour services , property and capital ) are better off as a result of it .
16 The Government 's claim that students are better off as a result of student loans simply is not true ; nor is it true that loans make up for the loss of income support and housing benefit .
17 The snag is , scientists do not yet know whether patients taking the drug for a long time are better off with a little testosterone , or none .
18 This is Mike Jardine , one of Scotland 's leading extreme skiers , proving that naked apes are better off with one-piece skisuits .
19 If you really want to make light of powder you are better off with specialised hardware .
20 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 .
21 It is one of the ways in which we ensure that , so far as possible , people are better off in work than out of work .
22 I share her view that industry , commerce and individuals in this country are better off in the European Community than outside it .
23 Rennie House ground floor post room , loading bay and print room are all about to be re-planned including a new corridor that by-passes the loading bay .
24 I am better off without you .
25 Bruno Walter was there and afterwards I was offered the post of first kapellmeister ; but I had to say , frankly I am better off in Aachen .
26 As with all our Go-As-You-Please Fly-Drive packages , your exact route and itinerary are entirely up to you .
27 however , however , however you judge these things are entirely up to those who are right and those who are receiving them , but I thought she was very good , she wrote some poems about us really
28 Your financial situation can improve , but you may have to wait until next year before you are entirely out of the woods .
29 I am perhaps out of line with some of my hon. Friends in that I quite enjoyed the speech made by the Secretary of State for the Environment , who opened the debate for the Government .
30 Mr Blair took the lead , claiming : ‘ Some young offenders are so out of control and such menaces to society that they are going to have to be put in some form of secure accommodation . ’
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