Example sentences of "[adv] [v-ing] [adv prt] a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The Acrylix brushes helped me to make broad , glazing strokes , slowly building up a depth of colour .
2 Having established the undercoat by way of washing and blotting onto damp paper , I now begin to apply very watery paint onto dry paper , slowly building up a series of translucent layers .
3 Having established the undercoat by way of washing and blotting onto damp paper , I now begin to apply very watery paint onto dry paper , slowly building up a series of translucent layers .
4 Van Dijk has analysed the language of racism , thereby building up a picture of modern ideology which pays particular attention to the way that elite messages can be transformed into ordinary discourse ( van Dijk , 1985b , 1987 ) .
5 I remember the disgraceful way she allowed you to be neglected when you had flu , only bringing up a water biscuit or two when she deigned to climb the stairs !
6 Either of these could match the new borders or blinds or undercurtains , perhaps bringing out a colour that had not been emphasized before .
7 Although the rules only allow the purchase of one new free-standing AVC policy a year , it is possible to purchase a different policy every year , so building up a spread of investments .
8 They were just two friends , enjoying the cool evening air , perhaps walking up a thirst before repairing to a beer hall .
9 After dinner we would gossip , play cards or perhaps walk along the Dee , idly picking up a piece of driftwood here and there along the way .
10 Richardson was extraordinarly charismatic , dressed in very tight trousers and thigh-length boots — which may have had something to do with my infatuation — and he characterised Richard as a man of great vanity , constantly picking up a mirror and checking himself in it .
11 And , perhaps going back a bit and looking at the history of the last ten years , it is important to realize that we have developed small centres as well as large ones .
12 At first , I was only going out a coupla days a week .
13 It is not very easy to judge when you are two-thirds of the way through a turn , so turning round a buoy provides a good reference point .
14 Claiming that it is merely cleaning up a technicality , the government , in clause 50 of the current finance bill , is cheerily trying to rewrite the law , retroactively , five years after the event .
15 Well it 's only coming out a yard is n't it ?
16 ‘ But you are kinda running up a backlog in my favour account . ’
17 So crawling along a girder that was swaying gently under the dome of a gigantic space station induced a level of fear that Ace thought she could handle .
18 More orthodox critics feared that he was only stoking up a consumer boom which would reap the whirlwind in a vast price inflation .
19 Michael would 'ave bin twenty-four an' John twenty-five , ’ Sadie told her , suddenly taking out a handkerchief from her apron pocket and dabbing at her eyes .
20 no , there 's more schools than that , cos er the lady said that er , she goes I 'm , cos there is when you he went what schools are these ? , and so reading out a couple of schools , about four of 'em
21 Mr Lang was accused of merely carrying out a public relations exercise , however .
22 This has two properties together making up a property complex ; each property is applied to the immediately adjacent subject of the sentence .
23 The alternative version has the same two properties together making up a property complex that is applied to the immediately adjacent subject of the sentence ; moreover in both cases the complex as a whole is assigned syntactically to the subject E ; the sole difference is in the matter of which property is taken as " senior " to the other within the bounds of the complex , as in ( 63 ) , and in such a case this will produce an infinitesimal semantic difference : ( 63 ) However this sort of syntactic trading is only possible where the language contains suitable lexical items ; it must have an adverb and verb with the appropriate meanings ; thus , in the absence of an adverb equivalent to after a change and a verb meaning to be orange , for instance , English can not offer such an alternative for ( 64 ) : ( 64 ) in spring , their skin turns orange 5.8 The range of verbs which can occur with postverbal adjectives is in fact quite wide .
24 And of course your parents not wanting you to do something is merely putting out a fire with gasoline .
25 Some areas of policy may be the subject only of unspecific recommendations , perhaps setting out a range of loosely worded options .
26 Each truck has to carry 26 of them , together weighing over a ton .
27 In the cases that followed ( ie the disposal of the whole of the matrimonial home to the wife ( Chapter 3 ) ; a conveyance of the husband 's interest in the matrimonial home to the wife ( Chapter 4 ) ; and the conveyance of the husband 's interest in the matrimonial home to a third party ( Chapter 5 ) ) , once the husband had disposed of his interest no further tax considerations applied so far as the husband was concerned ( unless there was an element of gift involved in the conveyance not at arm 's length and the husband died within seven years , thus bringing in a charge to inheritance tax ) .
28 In addition , exercise does help to control the appetite so it may help you to reduce your intake — thus bringing about a weight loss in an indirect way .
29 Josie rummaged in her oversized handbag , finally bringing out a set of keys on a ring .
30 One relatively manageable task would be to use the computers currently employed to sort out lists and marks for item analyses of marks scored in individual questions , thus building up a profile of strengths and weaknesses in the subject analysed .
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