Example sentences of "[adv] close [prep] a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Polite win for Pompey FOOTBALL : Portsmouth , who went so close to a promotion and Wembley double , have finished the season with a trophy after all .
2 I mean , can you think of any other situation , Pop , when a man gets so close to a woman except when he 's actually making love to her ? ’
3 A few weeks after his escape from a film disaster , Dustin came shatteringly close to a disaster of a more fatal kind .
4 In fact it comes remarkably close to a conceptualisation of Susan Brownmiller 's famous assertion that ’ Rape is a conscious process of intimidation by which all men keep all women in a state of fear . ’
5 But since such progress is conceived as immanent to musical history itself , independent of variants of musical practice , social usage and reception , the theory moves dangerously close to a hypostasis of technique ; at the very least it confines the relationship between musical and social structures to the level of the longue durée , since at that level society is ‘ encapsulated ’ in music , while in between , music 's ‘ autonomous unfoldment … follows the social dynamics without a glance or any direct communication ’ ( ibid : 206–7 ) , still less putting itself at the service of particular social subjects .
6 When , in a voice that is neither , he sings ‘ My arms were sure and strong ’ , a glance at his thin arms and meagre frame brings you dangerously close to a belly-laugh . ’
7 And of course , they had these signs up about la up close to a signal er twenty , twenty five or thirty or whatever it was , that was miles an hour , they were supposed to reduce to that .
8 An advertising poster for the clothing company Benetton which features a burning car has been put up close to a housing estate notorious for joyriders .
9 If you have car trouble , try to get as close to a telephone as possible .
10 There was no getting away from the fact that , as a unit , the Scotland back row were so disjointed as to be at times perilously close to a vacuum .
11 This was weighted with a large wooden tag charred at the end where Father Barnes had put it down too close to a gas flame .
12 His neat , Astaire-like side-step to the road where he would rather die under a shining new Merc than to have to go too close to a cripple .
13 That approach was also rejected , because it was getting too close to a rating system , but it would have had some logic , a factor that is entirely outwith the system with which we are now confronted .
14 ‘ You know , Anne , you can get too close to a problem and not see it properly .
15 It is pitiful to see the agony of a naïve dog that has nosed up too close to a skunk and been sprayed in the face .
16 I think your lombardoi is abrading her upper lip on something — possibly through digging too close to a rock , so that her upper lip gets rubbed .
17 And do n't site it too close to a house wall , or you will get sooty stains — unless you build some form of screening .
18 In Germany , this spirit often takes the form of a ‘ bergmonck ’ or huge , pale monk who wards off travellers venturing too close to a mine rich with lodes of gold .
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