Example sentences of "[to-vb] [adv] in [art] " in BNC.
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1 | the rocket was projected up to a considerable height and directed to fall somewhere in the London area . |
2 | The costs of such systems are extremely variable , but are likely to fall somewhere in the regions of : |
3 | Now this is and I must admit when he pulled the trigger then I thought that was going to go right in the back of the net . |
4 | My standing with Harold Wilson began to go downhill in the 1970s , not on personal grounds but because of what might be described as political differences . |
5 | Lord Callaghan , then Labour 's foreign affairs spokesman , recently recalled that the party 's decision was to allow Mr Heath ‘ to swing slowly in the wind ’ . |
6 | The Royal School for Deaf Children , Margate evacuated to Oxfordshire where three large houses were taken over in Goring-on-Thames and the school was able to carry on in a ‘ make-do ’ fashion . |
7 | Mellor told Mr Major he felt unable to carry on in a phone call early yesterday morning . |
8 | Instead of thinking that it is natural for a moving object to carry on in a straight line at a steady speed , and then worrying about how the force of gravity manages to pull all objects — heavy ones and light ones — round in the same orbit , what we ought to be doing is thinking of the path they all follow as being the natural path . |
9 | Set up under a special government programme in 1989 with funding for three years , it has done so well it is to carry on in a slimmed down form under a new name Tees Valley Conference and Visitor Bureau under the control of the Northumbria Tourist Board . |
10 | It has been so successful it is to carry on in a slimmed down form , with a new name Tees Valley Conference and Visitor Bureau under the control of the Northumbria Tourist Board . |
11 | There were insufficient funds for a third appointment so that Allan Hayhurst had to carry on in an honourary capacity combining once again the offices of Secretary and Treasurer . |
12 | After various consultations with interested parties , it was decided to carry on in the traditional manner . |
13 | The Minister warned : ‘ He may be able to carry on in the job but he can not do so effectively . |
14 | One therefore gets trapped into a situation where it appears much easier to carry on in the business than to divest , or move out . |
15 | Even then it should not apply where all that the Purchaser does is to carry on in the ordinary course of the business . |
16 | ‘ In no way will there be enough teams left to carry on in the age groups concerned . |
17 | This silly and childlike regressive behaviour can not be allowed to go on in a relationship in which a couple care for one another . |
18 | If knowing how to go on in a discipline is largely a matter of rule-following , it remains the case that the rules are as much socially imposed by the disciplinary tribe as they are by epistemic considerations ( Becher 1989 ) . |
19 | Lights began to go on in the dark houses , and I relished my melancholy to the last drop . |
20 | Speaking after delivering an emotional tribute to his party workers , he said : ‘ There 's a great deal of serious reflection that has to go on in the opposition parties , but I 've no doubt that most of the reflection has to take place within Labour and it has to take place on the subject of PR . |
21 | Speaking after delivering an emotional tribute to his party workers , he said : ‘ There 's a great deal of serious reflection that has to go on in the opposition parties , but I 've no doubt that most of the reflection has to take place within Labour and it has to take place on the subject of PR . |
22 | So I started to write a variation on the first bar and told her to go on in the same way and to keep to the idea . |
23 | She wanted him to stop yet at the same time wanted him to go on in the hope that the lovely sensations would begin again . |
24 | Ordinarily , learning allows us to go on in the same way , to repeat what has been learned , whether it is a matter of fact ( that London is the capital of England ) or an action ( driving a car in familiar circumstances ) . |
25 | Was there a lot of erm drinking used to go on in the , in the , in the area at the time ? |
26 | A concrete breakwater stretches away to sink slowly in the dark distance . |
27 | However , unless I want junk food from one of the many establishments purveying it in this thoroughly commercialised station , all I have available to sit on in the huge concourse is a grubby metal flip-up slat a few inches wide . |
28 | For example , Pete Coleman had to carry a shooting-stick for Greg Norman to sit on in the 1982 Australian Open , and in Zambia a caddie I saw on my Safari Tour travels carried an extra that could have proved an even bigger life-saver than the carrots that are pulled out of the bag by Sam Torrance 's caddie Malcolm Mason ( the carrots are supposed to calm Sam down on the greens ) : the Zambian caddie was carrying President Kaunda 's bag in a pro-am , and surreptitiously tucked away was a gun , just in case somebody tried to assassinate the golfing president while he decided on a four- or a five-iron . |
29 | You 're welcome , ’ then went to the sink in the far corner of the kitchen to wash his hands , came back to the fireside to sit down in a chair to the right of the oven , and watched his wife putting out the meal . |
30 | To sit down in a cafe you had to buy a cup of tea . |