Example sentences of "[vb pp] [verb] [prep] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | She had been at one of the best State schools in England , where she would still be , no doubt , but for what Toby had heard referred to as an Incident . |
2 | Not the cover on him there might have been , the sort of er chance clear chance that was given say to in the local derby match the other Saturday , and really made it count . |
3 | Initial deliveries are expected to go to at least the other announced PowerPC allies , Groupe Bull SA , Thomson-CSF , Harris Corp and Tadpole Technology plc , with Apple taking the lion 's share . |
4 | And Brotherhood was the only object one was expected to conform to in becoming a member . |
5 | BTG is expected to sell for between £30m and £50m , but could go for as much as £100m . |
6 | It is expected to sell for between £150,000–£250,000 . |
7 | The product is expected to sell for from $17,000 to $30,000 when available in June . |
8 | The case will resume tomorrow and is expected to last for at least two weeks . |
9 | A pipe organ may be expected to last for between fifty and one hundred years , but at least one major overhaul will lie necessary during this period . |
10 | The ban followed the Chernobyl accident , and was expected to last until at least the end of the century . |
11 | THE FUNERAL PROCESSION WAS REPORTED TO STRETCH FOR AT LEAST 2 MILES . |
12 | Only 10 per cent of the 1940–4 birth cohort of women ( now aged 45–50 ) remained childless ; this figure is expected to rise to at least 15 per cent and possibly 20 per cent for the 1960–4 birth cohort ( Werner 1986 , OPCS 1989a , figure 4.9 ) . |
13 | In India alone the number of confirmed HIV-infected cases , currently totalling 11,000 , was expected to rise to at least 50,000 by 1995 . |
14 | The number of jobless , already at a record 3.1m ( 10.7% of the workforce ) , is expected to rise by at least 340,000 by the end of the year . |
15 | By the year 2020 the number is expected to rise by at least the same amount to reach nearly 100 million over-60s in the 12 member states . |
16 | How much trouble are we prepared to go to for the privilege of sharing our lives with feline companions ? |
17 | Other commentators ( Hartung 1952 ; De Gré 1970 [ though written in 1941 ] ; Horowitz 1961 ) tended to the position we have already seen adhered to by Grunwald and Hinshaw ; that the sociology of knowledge was illegitimate when it refused to recognize the primacy of epistemology in dealing with validity and competition between knowledge systems . |
18 | Although the passengers were concealed by drawn curtains , an unpleasant thug dressed in a coachman 's uniform could be seen dismounting from behind the reins . |
19 | But I have n't seen to talk to for |
20 | Even text out of a tint looks pretty good — it has none of that ‘ hairy ’ appearance that we have grown used to with 300dpi systems . |
21 | However , they are not PostScript typefaces and the quality is sometimes a little less than you have grown used to on the laser printer . |
22 | Erm with without a new settlement erm that that was indeed the the impression that erm I was left with as well , and what what we 've sought to do in in the evidence that we 've we 've put before you is to take the nine seven , nine thousand seven hundred figure in Greater York , and and er s based on the data supplied by the County Council to demonstrate that that actually when one looks at outstanding commitments erm with planning permission , identified the sites er without planning permission , those those that are allocated in local plans , making suitable allowances for small sites erm windfall sites and conversion , erm the the residual figure that is left in Greater York , which I calculate to be eight thousand six hundred and thirty seven , once one has taken away completions , which I think is an agreed figure between nineteen ninety one and nineteen ninety three of one thousand and sixty three , that erm , those existing commitments , and the sites likely to come forward , ma virtually match the figure for the outstanding housing requirement , so so one is left with a view that erm from from the data that 's put in front of us that there is n't a residue of that size to accommodate , although I accept that there may well be a residue of some sort , erm and it seems to me that the established Greater York erm framework , er is is the process by which that is distributed around the counties along the lines that the discussion 's proceeded this morning . |
23 | In the absence of such a policy , the society had sought to merge with at least eight institutions — universities , museums and libraries — before initiating talks with the New York Public Library . |
24 | Molly drove skilfully back down the road , taking the short cut to what she had already grown to think of as home . |
25 | ‘ Here the contract of salvage was entered into in the Paracels and all the work of refloating and putting the vessel into a condition to be towed to Hong Kong and nearly all the tow , except for the last three miles , were completed beyond the territorial limits of Hong Kong and consequently I take the view that the profits must be said to arise outside of Hong Kong rather than inside . |
26 | But at least they could hold off within the value of what they now held , and were empowered to dispose of to advantage . |
27 | The reasons advanced for this failure in the " statement " of 1904 were " the difficulties which female organisers have had to contend with in other trades — apathy and lack of support " . |
28 | Wilcoxin signed rank test was used to compare pre with postoperative figures and the Mann-Whitney U test to analyse differences between subgroups and controls in symptom scores and results of function tests . |
29 | Got to go across to that Olympus , right shall we come on quickly . |
30 | I figure it 's got to go across from one side to another |