Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | This policy of concentration has resulted in housing being provided in the form of large estates , built to uniform design by large building firms , tacked on somewhat incongruously to the older village core . |
2 | Murdock stayed in Cornwall for about 19 years and got on much better with the miners than Watt had done . |
3 | ‘ I 'm sure that we 'll be able to get on much better in the future . ’ |
4 | Yeah you keep the log cos the log book 's got to be done Right so there on the first one it 's got ta be Matt and Jan , lazy shit |
5 | Well basically it 's the people , like we get on so well with the English over here and as they say back home the . |
6 | I wondered how you caught on so quickly to the trick of running water which will blot out all our conversation . |
7 | Is that why you 're holding on so tightly to the one you 've got ? |
8 | But I said too a man of sorts , for the acknowledgement now includes crippled masculinity , and with that Joyce is free to embody and enact a different fear hinted at before in , for example , The Dead , but masked by the victim 's status of the woman thrust on so cruelly by the culture . |
9 | I do not believe that it is possible to measure the consequences to our political life that flowed from his early death , following on so rapidly after the death of Aneurin Bevan . |
10 | This role may have been rather a disappointment to both sides , as General Gallagher said when he got back from Hanoi , although by opposing the clearance of wartime US mines that had been laid in Haiphong harbour , thus preventing an early return of French troopships , Gallagher seems to have come down rather heavily on the Vietminh side . |
11 | This was not , as far as Robert remembered , in the script , but it seemed to be going down rather well with the audience . |
12 | We seem to have gone down rather well at the venues we performed in , and have already received requests to do a repeat performance for Children in Need next year — perhaps I could get LASMO emblazoned on the front of my costume then ! ’ |
13 | She sat down rather stiffly on the grass , being careful to keep a safe distance between them . |
14 | But it did so most sharply in the cyclical industries , where little of the takeover fun was happening . |
15 | ‘ All right , fellows , ’ he said , ‘ kneel down right here on the floor . ’ |
16 | as if suddenly he might not be able to help himself and suddenly right there in the middle of The Bar he would say out loud : Fuck me . |
17 | Poor man , he dropped down dead just at the beginning of the terrible winter of 1947 . |
18 | Boy stood outside the window and imagined the things he might see inside this magazine , should he ever take it down off the high shelf and open it , perhaps in the privacy of his room or perhaps right there on the street at five o'clock . |
19 | Linguistic and sexual terminology come together most often in the context of the Saussurian theorization of binary opposition , illustrated by an excerpt from a paper given at a conference on linguistics : |
20 | Four ‘ change-facilitating factors ’ are picked out by Ramon ; heavy and unchanging reliance on segregated institutions ; the existence of a minority of psychiatrists prepared to act politically ( while not having the desire to act in a party political framework ) ; the autonomous nature of the regions leading to more enthusiastic reform beginning in socialist and communist areas ; and perhaps most importantly for the concerns of this book , |
21 | Of course , this in itself is not a new finding ; it has emerged elsewhere in experimental work , perhaps most notably in the field of bargaining experiments . |
22 | The matrix equation unc arises perhaps most commonly in the study of the natural frequencies and modes of vibration of an undamped mechanical system having n degrees of freedom . |
23 | ‘ There 's a camp being put together right now on the moor at the top of the brae , ’ Maggie explained . |
24 | Had her ordeal come a century or two later than it did , the unsinkable Sancie would have had an uplifting view during her brief immersion , for the church and the tower of Sauveterre look especially well from down below here by the river . |
25 | Soviet control had originally been exercised through the Communist International and much less effectively through the Cominform , which was established in 1947 and dissolved in 1956 . |
26 | In the Second Duma , although their urban vote held up , they fared much less well at the hands of more politically-conscious peasants , they failed dismally to attract working-class support , and their representation fell by half . |
27 | This may sound complicated , but once Sigma has been identified it is easy to find again with binoculars , though much less so with the naked eye . |
28 | But rabbits are most accessible to the mink in the spring and autumn , and much less so over the winter . |
29 | These comments are obviously most relevant for work forces where there is little tendency to move out , this is characteristic of a surprisingly large number of organisations in European countries and in Japan but much less so in the U.S.A. |
30 | One must be a little careful with the word ‘ translation ’ here : it is fairly innocuous in the present context of WALK , translated into the string of sub-functions , but much less so in the earlier use of the relation of a program in LISP , say into a lower-level program in machine code . |