Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] [art] [noun] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Right through the decision letters , you get two elements .
2 Finally , David Stirling intended to take a small party and penetrate right through the enemy lines to join up with the First Army , which had landed in Algeria .
3 First of all , the main story in our news at five thirty , and I think unless anything more dramatic happens , it will be the main story right through the news bulletins of this programme .
4 To herself Annabel thought that it would n't interfere with the running of the Universe if enough money could be found somewhere for the university fees and accommodation for Eve Malone , the child who had no home except the big bleak convent with the heavy iron gates .
5 Mr Carmichael was in contemplative mood yesterday after the news that betting shops would be allowed to remain open until 10pm during the summer months , bringing Scotland into line with England and Wales .
6 From what the copper had said , though , it was somewhere between the North Downs Way country park and Brands Hatch .
7 Real , dynamic — secretly sensitive — life-affirming songs , which fall somewhere between The Beastie Boys and The Ramones .
8 Even more careful adjustment may permit the output to settle somewhere between the amplifier limits .
9 Friends and relatives tell me I should have stopped by now , and I know I do n't want to carry on through the toddler years .
10 The raising of money for the Building Fund went on through the war years and many heroic efforts were made .
11 I think that it is important not to lose sight of the fact that the judgment relates specifically to Claus Ramrath 's circumstances and , in particular , the fact that Mr Ramrath had already obtained authorisation locally as a reviseur d'entreprises .
12 It can only be dried out by diffusing it slowly through the tube walls .
13 A fierce battle is now on for the constituent firms across Europe , the Pacific basin and Canada .
14 And there seemed an almost endless queue of freighters , tankers and oreships waiting in the roads at each end , some at anchor , some jostling politely for the lock entrances .
15 Alternatively , it may be suggested that the question was how much the French should have been asked to concede ; and even if the critical time , ( according to Edmund Gullion , ) was ‘ right after the Elysee agreements of March 1949 ’ and for all the complaint that ‘ South-East Asia 's policy has been junked ’ , and dismay at Acheson 's ‘ French captivity , a closer inspection suggests that there may not in fact have been all that much difference in the assumptions upon which different parts of the State Department were operating .
16 One of the worst incidents involved the shooting on March 11 of 19 Hindu engineers at a textile factory in Harkishanpura which had defied orders by Sikh militants to close down during the state elections in February [ see p. 38762 ] .
17 They know that the rich did very nicely during the Thatcher years and believe it is they not the poor who should make any sacrifices necessary to get the country out of recession .
18 Surely , she mused , it had n't been raining long enough for the water levels to rise that far , and even though the middle of the week had proved consistently wet she felt confident she would arrive at the cottage long before the possibility became a reality .
19 We can not thank you all enough for the kind letters of support and assistance .
20 There is a growing number of course in higher education with a language component but — apart from the law degrees — not enough for the service professions and vocations .
21 But whether artificial intelligence turns out to be good enough for the movie makers is likely to be another matter .
22 Watercolour washes dry by evaporation , so it is essential that the wash remains in a liquid state long enough for the pigment particles to disperse uniformly .
23 But , well wrapped up in the story , the device certainly worked well enough for the crime reviewers of that year to vote the book the Gold Dagger award .
24 The lighting of this tiny interior is soft and gentle ; it comes only through the alabaster panes of the small windows .
25 The draught coming in through the ventilation ducts made it tremble continuously .
26 He did n't mind losing his board and slogging in through the breaking waves .
27 They were waiting for the lift when they saw a man come hurrying in through the swing doors .
28 When two police cars raced in through the school gates she hid behind a wall .
29 He went in through the school gates when he were five
30 Tig was standing by the gate to the enclosure , staring in through the earth walls , his dream-filled mind on other things than the old shaman .
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