Example sentences of "[verb] through in the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 CUD ARE inclined to assign their ‘ terminally wacky ’ tag to their irreverent cover version of Hot Chocolate 's ‘ You Sexy Thing ’ , but Mike Dunphy is certain they 'll win through in the end .
2 CUD ARE inclined to assign their ‘ terminally wacky ’ tag to their irreverent cover version of Hot Chocolate 's ‘ You Sexy Thing ’ , but Mike Dunphy is certain they 'll win through in the end .
3 Eddie McNally has won through in the men 's singles Section A with wins over G Byrne 21–15 and Richard Neilson whom he beat 21–14 to face the experienced Tommy Hopper .
4 That legislation can not be carried through in the remainder of this Parliament and will be a matter for the next Parliament .
5 The reforms of Joseph II ( 1780–90 ) , which were carried through in the spirit of the Age of Enlightenment , included a secularisation of education and the recognition of the rights of the Slav subjects of the Empire to instruct in their own language .
6 The reform was not carried through in the House but the phrenologists urged or reformers elsewhere and , indirectly , their enthusiasm led on to William Forster 's Education Bill of 1870 which established in Britain the system of elementary schools for all .
7 As a testimony to one trade-unionist 's authority and stature , carried through in the face of some hostility within the administration and somewhat glacial relations with Denis Healey at the Treasury , it was a remarkable accomplishment .
8 Warm through in the oven for 2–3 minutes .
9 It costs eighty five p , and you can get it from any of the H M S O — Her Majesty 's Stationery Office — or you could order it , I should think , from most bookshops , and that 'll give you a pretty good overview of what Warnock is trying to do , and then , of course if anybody 's interested enough in comparing that with the Act , you 'll see the kind of things that were in the Warnock Report have n't actually come through in the act .
10 The closure problem has come through in the appearance of another function F in the equation for E ; F is related to the Fourier transform of the triple correlation .
11 ‘ With the Government slowly clamping down on all media coverage , unless I moved fast any chance of filming within South Africa would be gone and I did want the accuracy and flavour of the country itself to come through in the film . ’
12 Eddie also got through in the singles with a 21–7 win over Eddie Price and Maureen Fearon , the Irish international bowler from Dungannon beat L. Hill 21–17 and then teamed up with Fra Brady to beat A and M Hoey in the mixed pairs .
13 The remainder of the analysis is carried out by ‘ rolling back ’ the decision tree , that is by moving back from the final pay-off figures , node by node , multiplying each pay-off by the probability of each event passed through in the network .
14 The remainder of the analysis is carried out by ‘ rolling back ’ the decision tree , that is by moving back from the final pay-off figures , node by node , multiplying each pay-off by the probability of each event passed through in the network .
15 No , I would say that if an independent assessor has been dispatched to this is a good point worth bringing through in the event of erm a disagreement between ourselves and a policy holder , the policy holder has a number of aspects that they can they can approach .
16 Simply heated through in the oven with fresh butter , smokies are to me one of the most exquisite of our national specialities .
17 Indeed it was a very misty and cloudy start , but the sun did break through in the west , the east getting some rain as well as the grey stuff .
18 These differences in education came through in the interview .
19 ‘ We have invested a lot of money in people , offices and warehousing over the last two years ; and this will only show through in the company 's profits in 1994–95 . ’
20 ‘ To be realistic we need other teams to slip up to sneak through in the league so the cup is really our priority , ’ says 29-goal striker David McCallen who grabbed that sensational winner against his former club Linfield in the quarter-finals .
21 Yes I think a team that can go away and sneak a win will be the team that gets through in the end .
22 This theme was also played through in the photograph and text work , which was sited in the Special Care Baby Unit where Rory was born , six weeks prematurely , in 1987 .
23 Large numbers of waders pass through in the autumn including curlew , sandpiper and ruff .
24 They always get through in the end , though . ’
25 As the lava cools down further , to a dull red , more and more chilled fragments remain on the surface , and these small particles soon agglomerate together , forming progressively larger plates or rafts which cover the surface of the flow , the hot lava itself only glowing through in the cracks between rafts .
26 That raises the question of whether or not that gives him the sort of ‘ job security ’ necessary to experiment with the new players coming through in the hope of building a side capable of beating All Blacks , Wallabies and Springboks .
27 We were well stuck into an excellent local red type of mouthwash , Donnaz , when Ino insisted on our sampling a white Pinot Noir from one of the localities I remembered crawling through in the train .
28 Whether enough other Labour hopefuls win through in the ring of nondescript suburban and outer-London seats may ultimately depend on whether voters are more impressed by Labour 's dismal record in the city , or by its attractive and well-packaged promises .
29 Private eyes always win through in the end . ’
30 I get into impossible scrapes but win through in the end .
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