Example sentences of "[to-vb] [adv prt] [prep] their " in BNC.

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1 There is fat chance of that for as long as the Government allows the banks to carry on with their grasping one-way policy .
2 In public , people tried to carry on with their lives , while at home they were starting to prepare for what was to come .
3 Adds Lt Watts : ‘ What often made situations all the more tragic was the fact that these poor From here is single col for page 7 people were trying to carry on with their lives .
4 ‘ The whole set up is there and yet the other parties want to carry on with their wasteful plans . ’
5 Governors should recognise their power to co-opt on to their working groups , in a non-voting capacity , any member of the local community who could offer specific expertise and skills which they may be lacking .
6 The landlord of The Morning Star at New Bradwell , was Major Ansell MBE ( HG ) , who thought it unjust that they had to soldier on after their experiences .
7 ‘ It 's not my intention to stay cooped up in here , waiting for them to go on with their little games . ’
8 A large group in the opposite corner had erupted into laughter at just the right moment , to mask the sound of her action , however , and even those who had seen and heard were simply hiding slightly shocked and curious smiles behind polite hands and pretending to go on with their talk .
9 Does my right hon. Friend accept that if the major galleries of this country are to go on with their extremely enlightened and successful purchasing programme , it is essential that we bring in charging for entry ?
10 They had been briefed to report in on their mobile telephone at certain checkpoints en route , and to inform the Ops Room of any suspicious incidents , but their main task was to stop and talk to locals , in order to make their presence known in as friendly a way as possible .
11 Soon the room became so hot with the heat of the lamps , pupils had to strip down to their shirt sleeves and wear shorts when entering the room .
12 I mean there we are we 've got a er purveyors of er intoxicating liquor allowing children to go in to their bars or hang around outside .
13 In one group of eight , half chose to go in for their first farrowing ; the second time they farrowed , all eight went in .
14 We found that a lot of young couples that because you do n't go to church on a regular basis but erm , to go along with their parents ' wishes too , rather than going through a big church wedding in a church , they go to a hotel and they have the erm , wedding ceremony and the reception all in the hotel , and are married by a minister .
15 Farmers , while including all gradations of responsiveness within their ranks , do in many cases have a deep feeling for the land which they see every day , and which in many cases was shaped by their fathers and grandfathers , and which they would like to pass on to their children .
16 Education is one of the privileges that bureaucrats increasingly are able to pass on to their offspring , together with their important connections in the state apparatus , which Cliff maintains is used as their private property ( Cliff 1964 ) .
17 We erm at Dunfermline Athletic Football Club , as in a lot of other erm premiere and first division clubs specifically develop family enclosure areas for women to come along with their husbands and
18 Yes , I mean I run a series for one of the local newspapers on past Lewes mayors and the amount of work that I had to do for that meant that I picked up all sorts of pieces of information about what other mayors had tried in the past , and things that had been successful and things that had been disasters , and as it was the centenary I went to a lot of trouble to look up exactly what had happened a hundred years ago and to try and recreate the ceremonial connected with that , and then when we elected erm two people honourary freeman of the town I got in all of the other mayors from Sussex , asked them to come along with their robes and mace bearers and so on , and we had this very sort of grand ceremonial procession in the Assembly Hall , which was sort of packed out with about four hundred people .
19 And then when we elected erm two people Honorary Freemen of the town , erm I got in all of the other mayors from Sussex , asked them to come along with their robes and their mace-bearers and so on , and we had this very sort of grand ceremonial procession in the assembly hall which was packed house of about four hundred people .
20 British restaurant cooking had been despaired of after fifteen years of siege conditions until the counter-attack of The Good Food Guide , founded in 1951 by Raymond Postgate , a pioneering bon vivant , and compiled by himself , his friends and any members of the public who could be bothered to write in with their recommendations ( one who did was a lion tamer ) .
21 The Whitby Gazette announced that there would be a high tide on Ascension Eve that year , and readers were invited to write in with their views on the subject .
22 They had always relied on speed and skill in horsemanship , which enabled them to dash in upon their adversaries , fire off a salvo from their short but deadly bows , and then retreat before any reprisal .
23 Now that the women were by themselves , the man whom Penelope had noticed staring at Ianthe seemed to pluck up courage to come over to their table .
24 She sighed over the poverty and squalor of the streets they had to pass through on their way out of Dublin .
25 It has been designed to be of value and interest to all grades of nurses who may wish to work through for their own interest and professional development .
26 They could not hold him now , they could only hope to come off with their lives and unidentified .
27 The lucky ones had bikes but most had to walk long distances to meet up with their friends .
28 But it would be an even bigger surprise if Bulls were to slip up in their final game against Dunfermline Barr Electrics .
29 ‘ The clothes were fit to stand up on their own , they were that stiff with dust and grease .
30 Paul Twyman , of North Thanet said : ‘ The BMA are a trade union and they are entitled to stand up for their members ’ interests , but they are not entitled to abuse their professional position by deliberately scaremongering and frightening elderly patients . ’
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