Example sentences of "[adv] [vb base] [adv] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | It is when these fail that sex , drugs or alcohol are invoked to more effectively push down the pain . |
2 | After which , his empty sledge on his back , he would walk and clamber slowly back up the steepness to enter once more into the dripping slate shaft and repeat the exhausting process . |
3 | But I am not too keen on performances which concentrate entirely on rhetorical expression , and thereby lose both the singing quality , and the logic of the ‘ long line ’ . |
4 | ACT can also generate additional objects to create customised products — the group will ‘ effectively make up a bespoke product , assemble a bespoke suit to fit each client ’ . |
5 | The memoirs of great inter-war players like Dixie Dean , Tommy Lawton , and Stanley Matthews politely skate over the issue , but a Manchester United player in the 1920s recalled a telling incident involving the club captain , Frank Barson . |
6 | One girl wanted to cover him in whipped cream and honey and then slowly lick off every bit . |
7 | If the risk-free hedge is seen to produce a greater return than the risk-free rate then arbitrage will take place as investors offer to write more calls and so bring down the price of the option . |
8 | A stunted little boy suddenly starts to shoot up like a weed , a plain adolescent turns into a beauty overnight , and well-preserved middle-aged men who reach sixty still looking forty-five suddenly make up the deficit and more than overtake their age , all in a few months . |
9 | To get as close as possible to sea-dwelling fauna ( and perhaps pick up a crustacean for the lunchtable ) , take a short course in diving and snorkelling . |
10 | Ants , aphids and plants together make up a kind of farming economy based on sugar . |
11 | He did not attempt to remember all the features that together make up a face . |
12 | Personal allowances , premiums and payments to cover certain housing costs together make up the benefit payment . |
13 | We recognize a sign as a set of letters on a page , or an intelligible series of sounds , or an iconic device , and in the same perception we grasp what it stands for : signifier and signified together make up the sign . |
14 | If we could precisely specify and conclusively verify every member of the set of observation statements which together make up the meaning of a non-observation statement , that non-observation statement would , in accordance with the verification principle , have its own determinate meaning and in certain circumstances be determinately true or determinately false . |
15 | In S/Z the codes are more like ways of speaking that together make up the discourse . |
16 | They only pick out a word word here and there see |
17 | The remarks in this section only sketch out a province for which a proper theory of discourse deixis might provide an account . |
18 | As always , remember to practise sl-ow-ly at first and only build up the tempo as and when the part begins to feel comfortable . |
19 | In other words , we have fossils that just suddenly appear around the world at one moment in geological history and " whence , and whither flown again , who knows " ? |
20 | Without warning , it suddenly let out a blast of the 62 first line of Dixie on a five-tone airhorn , so loud and so unexpected that it made Alina take a startled step back . |
21 | They had just sat down when Zach suddenly let out a cry . |
22 | on the phone cos we only speak once a week , well I do n't think |
23 | We took a long walk down the Iron Pier . |
24 | Place in a bowl with the milk and gently heat over a pan of simmering water , stirring occasionally until melted and almost smooth . |
25 | Loss of skin tone or turgor — gently pinch up the skin which will normally snap straight back into place . |
26 | The imaginations of each church and indeed s of the several members perhaps shape differently the goal that lies ahead . |
27 | All these examples show the wide range of forces — economic , competitive and political — that together shape both the balance of sectoral bargaining power and the basis of government choice about the form of desired control . |
28 | However the emergence of anti-heroes like Billy Bunter , the demotion of romance to children 's literature , are obvious consequences of the Western world 's fifteen-hundred-year long climb down the ladder of literary modes . |
29 | The Financial Times commented that the accounts ‘ perhaps demonstrate why the remuneration of its auditors jumped 20% this year ’ . |
30 | Hebbert and McFall do , Hebbert decided , and he persuaded his partner they could not leave it at that after such a long flog up the mountainside . |