Example sentences of "[adv] down the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Right down the other end of the pipe , please , ’ said Gurder .
2 From the board powers are frequently delegated to committees of directors or to individual board members , and thence down the managerial hierarchy .
3 The hours slid slowly down the great entropy slope of the universe .
4 When her aunt was dressed she walked slowly down the narrow staircase in front of her in case , in her weak state , she should stumble .
5 He drove slowly down the wide Third Avenue .
6 But now let us climb slowly down the stratigraphical column to see what other widespread facies we can find .
7 Toy trucks moved between hangars ; a minute tractor drove slowly down the main runway .
8 A ship was moving slowly down the main channel , its engines throbbing in the stillness .
9 He peered uneasily down the dark tunnel at the end of the platform and remembered something else from their past : Mother Bernie and her holes in the universe , the holes that let the Evil in .
10 So down the wide staircase she goes , past the oak chest with its bowl of white roses on the half-landing , past the Albers squares , past the dim varnished portrait of a full-bosomed crimson gowned pearl-decked eighteenth-century woman who some take to be an ancestor , though she had in fact come with the house , down through the black and white tiled hall with its marble and gilt claw-legged table strewn with Christmas cards , gloves , and glossy free advertising magazines , and into the broad high first floor drawing-room , where sat Charles , drinking a gin and tonic , which she had expected , and talking to Esther and Alix , which she had not .
11 It is the same all down the Welsh border , from Cheshire down to the Severn , and thence across the Severn to the three south-western counties of Somerset , Devon and Cornwall .
12 I ran my hand gently down the bumpy back .
13 Flames licked over the straw , which crackled and flared , and the Wheel was clear of the ramp and bowling gently down the cleared path .
14 The mix is pumped gently down the inner tube , out through the bottom and up the outer tube .
15 He marched purposefully down the central aisle of the ward until he found the sister .
16 She remembered halfway down the rickety ladder stairs , but for would have been a final indignity .
17 She and Ethel were halfway down the next flight of stairs when they were suddenly joined by Bryce .
18 Johnson 's account pauses at the Fall of Fiers , today called Foyers , a little more than halfway down the south-eastern length of the Loch .
19 Sweeney Agonistes takes its audience back not simply to what was seen as the childhood , even babyhood of ritual and civilization , but further down the evolutionary ladder to the most primitive level of that ‘ amorphous protoplasm ’ which makes up the human egg .
20 The fact that the materials which emerged , for all their faults , were usable in schools reflects the hard work and experience of the writers , but as many of the participants themselves readily admitted the original ‘ Entebbe ’ books needed considerable modification — and the further down the primary age range one travelled the more they needed it .
21 The Founders and other people within NoS kept up the pressure to go even further down the Equal Opportunities road .
22 F. Further down the main valleys the rivers have become larger ( 3rd and 4th Order ) .
23 Each new administration in Washington appoints not only the heads of its departments , or ministries , but also a lot of people further down the departmental ladder .
24 Dave is further down the sixth floor corridor , it 's almost directly under this room
25 Groups further down the social scale were in a much weaker position than the boyars or the Church to press their interests upon the Grand Prince .
26 State-sponsored housing began to reach further down the social scale than previously and house building under subsidy began to increase in the later 1920s .
27 I can tell you that the further down the social scale we went the brighter and sweeter and richer the orange squash , and the more I loved it .
28 John Byng in 1781 saw the revolution as reaching rather further down the social scale : " I wish with all my heart that half the turnpike roads of the kingdom were plough 'd up , which have imported London manners , and depopulated the country — I meet milkmaids on every road , with the dress and looks of Strand misses … "
29 Even in the merchant activities of the outports , however , a great number of people were taking shares in trading ventures , and from much further down the social scale than was the case with the East India Company , only 1.6 per cent of whose investors held less than £100 in 1764 .
30 In 1946 the premises at 94 Charing Cross road had been taken over by Tony Godwin , and under his ownership the place had become to radical culture what Collets , further down the same road , was to radical politics .
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