Example sentences of "[v-ing] [adv] [noun] in " in BNC.

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1 With just a few basic materials , I now have paintings hanging on walls in relatives homes .
2 Mark McNally followed for bringing down Kiwomya in full flight and then Slater left referee Morrison no option after tripping Wieghorst , having been previously warned for a similar offence .
3 Mark McNally followed for bringing down Kiwomya in full flight and then Slater left referee Morrison no option after tripping Wieghorst , having been previously warned for a similar offence .
4 Sun and HP then secretly allied , bringing together expertise in the operating system and user interface respectively .
5 Yet , it was his originality that he could represent prevailing moods , drawing together themes in striking images and captions , thereby intensifying the attitudes from which his an emerged .
6 The new classification was to focus on drawing together items in the CAB information system by client-situation , so that seemingly disparate things , such as holiday insurance and local animal-care centres , would be brought together as part of the information a client may need when going on holiday .
7 It is not that students will get turned off by being given unconnected dollops of philosophy and sociology , and it is not that bringing in specialists in philosophy and sociology will lead to an incoherent curriculum , although both are true .
8 The castle 's stunted squad of masons and builders were still working to repair the damage the old man had done by tearing down walls in his attempt to prove these hidden glyphs were isolated aberrations , not — as they indeed were — ubiquitous .
9 ‘ I was walking down Piccadilly in 1973 with the woman who was later to become my wife when she grabbed me by the arm and steered me into St James 's church to see the carvings ’ .
10 The bell to announce the visiting hour had already been rung by the time they reached the hospital , and , after walking along corridors in the company of numerous people who carried flowers and parcels , they found themselves in a ward filled with beds and patients .
11 He would not listen to her instructions and caused a lot of damage by climbing on furniture and shelves , banging things with his toys , knocking down displays in shops , and so on .
12 Minoan wall frescoes showing youths leaping over bulls in the Cretan manner have been discovered in the Nile Delta .
13 Keeping up morale in the Falklands
14 Macdonald also remarks a contrario , that " while the cheapness of women 's work as compositors in Edinburgh seems to have attracted a certain class of work from London , the men 's success in keeping up wages in London bookbinding does not seem to have driven bookbinding to the provinces " .
15 He says he is in Liverpool but we are also keeping up inquiries in Scotland . ’
16 The industry is also interested in signing up people in Brazil to write programs ( Brazil boasts a large number of Japanese emigres ) .
17 A winding up order in respect of the bank was made in January 1992 .
18 This is very clear from the results of the monetary union with East Germany and the subsequent massive mopping up operation in which the central government is engaging .
19 Potting up petunias in coco fibre — only gloxinia failed to thrive in coir compost
20 Probably in an old photo of Lennon banging out barre-chords in some dive off the Reeperbahn .
21 The group is singling out stores in terms of product mix .
22 Film producers have ignored this fact and have made films in which masters jump ten feet in the air , thrashing out kicks in all directions .
23 As a senior member of the banking committee in the late 1980s , he had intervened with federal regulators on behalf of Charles H. Keating , while soliciting about $1,000,000 in political contributions from Keating 's Lincoln Savings and Loan Association [ see pp. 37848 ; 37998 ; 38223 ] .
24 The Soviet Union gave appreciable assistance in cultivating a significant air strength in contrast to the United States , which concentrated solely on the army in the south , ruling out aid in the air and naval spheres .
25 A scientific law or theory should ideally give us some information about how the world does in fact behave , thereby ruling out ways in which it could ( logically ) possibly behave but in fact does not .
26 Bowe represents the new order in heavyweight boxing , which has been in a state of confusion and flux since the day Buster Douglas shocked the world by knocking out Tyson in Tokyo two years ago .
27 The man then left the motorway and headed for Chester , driving around roads in the Mollington area .
28 The man then left the motorway and headed for Chester , driving around roads in the Mollington area .
29 The Keynesian model , by which was usually meant the model , is a fix-price theory which , by definition , is incapable of explaining why variations in the absolute price level occur .
30 It is in fact the French Simmental but larger than the Swiss Simmental , averaging perhaps 149cm in the bull ( 140cm in the cow ) and weighing
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