Example sentences of "[adv] for [art] [noun] [adv prt] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | erm at the same time , the bones on the side of the skull got sort of gradually disappeared , so that when you clench your jaws there 's got somewhere for the muscles out to bulge out to , supposing you 've got big muscles . |
2 | I gritted my teeth and hung on for the climb up to Ana 's Cross on the peak of Spaunton Moor . |
3 | So much for the talk on with the race … the mountain bikers hit the road first … 144 set off from the start in the centre of town … |
4 | ‘ It 's probably only one of the local kids sneaking in for a look around , ’ Jessamy tried to reassure herself . |
5 | In for a penny in for a pound ! |
6 | Just for a moment back there he had hypnotised her . |
7 | Grant 's mind was in a whirl as he sought desperately for a way out . |
8 | As he lunged for her she threw herself out of the way and looked desperately for a way out . |
9 | CHIRPY Les Dawson was back in a dame 's frock yesterday for a knees up with Linda Lusardi . |
10 | TENBY was all the rage yesterday for the Derby down to 8-1 . |
11 | ‘ Well , as I said , Else went along more for a night out than anything . |
12 | They had n't said much to me apart from announcing themselves as Detective-Sergeant Hatchard and Detective Constable White , and even when they got back inside , Hatchard talked to the pathologist while White went off for a snoop around , as policemen do . |
13 | like for a kick off , he went down to the skip last Saturday , the tip , we had , er he was clearing out the back yard , he took some rubble and boxes and things down there , and he was talking to the fellow there they said oh , he said er they were shutting this skip , er they 're moving it down the road and you 'll have to pay , you 'll have to pay to tip your rubbish |
14 | I 've got a continuation shot , well what I shall do is just try and line them up for a rush down to , which is not bad . |
15 | A branch line train took us to Aubagne where a coach picked us up for the journey up to the camp . |
16 | They are cared for by the shepherds , who would once have come up for the summer along with the animals , and slept in their traditional , bleak little cabins ; nowadays , they are for the most part motorized and can commute genteelly to the livestock from their homes below . |
17 | But erm , I have n't seen much of her at all this week , because erm , they 've all been out , I mean , they went up to London to see Miss Saigon , and they were gon na go out for a meal up there , and |
18 | Let him out for a roar round . |
19 | When Henry V died in Normandy in 1422 mos teutonicus was employed , as it was thought that conventional embalming would not hold out for the journey back to England . |
20 | The shipmaster was down by the mast , ready to lower the cross-spar with its square sail , and the crew were flexing their muscles and setting oars in the rowlocks to slide out for the turn up against the wind into Duart Bay . |
21 | Now for a round up of the division one matches played this afternoon , and the details of the England France Rugby Union International , here 's Jerome Sale . |
22 | Yeah , but it 's just really for the making up for the odd one I |
23 | an injection and been back for a check up , yes it 's a good thirty pounds , you ca n't step in the door really without twenty five pounds . |
24 | At the SCG I was impressed with the way the South African pace bowlers tightened line and length after somewhat loose opening period of play no doubt caused by first-time tension and over-eagerness to do well for the folks back home . |
25 | Determined not to look at the brute of a man opposite , Fabia was in the act of deciding that she would ask him nothing in future — not even for a ride back to Mariánské Láznë , she 'd take a taxi sooner — when she was suddenly brought to an abrupt halt . |
26 | Kenne gulped , and looked around for a way out . |
27 | The car gave a roar , then slowly moved out of the garage ; the dim side-lights showed a pale flicker on the back of the house , then swung around for an instant on to the gardens . |
28 | THE airpass holder who whinged to the Dallas check-in clerk that she had spent all day standing by for a flight out of one of America 's less attractive airports was gently chastised . |
29 | I ai n't in any real hurry and I stop every now and then for a look round . |
30 | He made a powerful intervention claiming that we must know where we are before we can take decisions , or we shall be paying twice — once in respect of the negotiations and then for the GATT round . |