Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | If he heard anything he would not dream of doing anything about it but would go on gazing indifferently over the heads of his sheep . |
2 | He rarely veers away from the subject of relationships ( ‘ Go Out And Get 'Em Boy ! ’ , |
3 | This extraordinary story was ruthlessly edited down to its allotted span and eventually tucked away in the last of four hour-long programmes . |
4 | Bakker also argued that the brontosaur footprints found in the 1930s in the Cretaceous Texas limestone showed left and right footprints close to the trackway centreline , hinting that they walked upright . |
5 | The Infinite Wheel present four UK harmonised house cuts loosely gathered together under the same title , the ‘ Dream Of Dreams ’ mix holding the dancefloor tactics whilst the epic and trippy ‘ Big Blue Mix ’ and ‘ Bay Of Rainbows ’ melt into each other to create a floaty yet still club-viable waxing . |
6 | Now empty , decay and neglect are slowly eating away at the building 's fabric . |
7 | The control panel is discreetly tucked away on the front and is totally invisible when the spa is in use . |
8 | A small friendly old pub pleasantly furnished and discreetly tucked away behind The Scotsman office . |
9 | ESC founders Michael Bogdanov and Michael Pennington director and star of the Shakespeare tragedy say they would rather stay away from the Civic , one of the strongest dates on their world tours , than face the same problem again . |
10 | That little faith went on to go right round the world and it 's here today . |
11 | Flotation has become properly developed only in the past 30 years : it was certainly not available to the ‘ old men ’ who ran the mines last century . |
12 | Market expectations are for little change upwards in the RPI from the latest figure of 7.3 per cent . |
13 | We eventually got away from the station and camped two hours later near a marsh , where we shot some duck for dinner , and two lily-trotters for our collection . |
14 | More and more armies were becoming reliable though still very cumbersome machines , mechanisms which could be relied on to perform competently on the battlefield the evolutions in which they had been trained , and to stand enemy fire without flinching . |
15 | Left and Right differed only on the nature of this conflict . |
16 | An hour later , Tracy and Miss Ludlow helped him secretly slip away from the hospital to spend two days in a secluded Miami retreat soaking up the sun before returning to Newmarket . |
17 | The child 's face remained frozen at the window and was slowly carried sideways down the wooden platform . |
18 | She has since toured extensively in the USA and parts of Europe , but has made very few appearances in these islands . |
19 | As you catch a wave and accelerate down its face you vigorously steer away from the wind . |
20 | Tending to follow market values , heriots might form realistic death duties , but other seigneurial perquisites , such as profits of the court , rarely added much to the total income . |
21 | At the other end of the scale , Plymouth Laira gained a small fleet of Class 37s which rarely ventured away from the West Country china clay empire , although a new trainload working was introduced in 1989 which would take them twice a week up to Irvine in South West Scotland . |
22 | Governments would not be swayed , nor would ministers tremble , on receipt of elegantly crafted and crisply sarcastic Notes written by him on the antique encryption machine which could be seen in a corner of the office , slowly rusting away in the hot , salt air . |
23 | I understand the definition of a bar is somewhere used principally for the consumption of alcoholic beverages . |
24 | More generally , it remains true that the severity of the Monopolies Commission 's findings mean that the board is necessarily placed somewhat on the defensive about its investment appraisals , and will find all its investment assumptions scrutinised with some suspicion . |
25 | In each case there can be no doubt that the advantages offered by the trust over the civil-law method were significant : performance in specie was a real possibility in each case ; that this was so depended entirely on the fact that trusts were subject to a different procedural order . |
26 | She did n't move ; only pressed tighter against the far wall of the cabin . |
27 | Such ensembles were not merely gathered together for the occasional ballet ; there were , in fact , three standing oboe bands at court , or , more accurately , three ensembles whose members played the oboe much of the time . |
28 | Seals have almost spherical lenses and can not flatten them enough to see far through the air . |
29 | He found it and obviously felt at ease enough to go ahead with the appointment , ’ said Mr King . |
30 | North Staffordshire Royal Infirmary has revealed that nearly a thousand cancer patients have been wrongly treated there in the past nine years . |