Example sentences of "[noun] [vb -s] [adv prt] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Carpet cleaning needs no chemicals ; handle fits on to heat shield , and steam hose clips on to this
2 Gordon Taylor points out in last Friday 's Echo Soccer in Crisis investigation that not all players enjoy rich rewards from the game when their careers can be cut short .
3 With his parents and sister involved as well , Larkins Brewery produces up to 30 barrels a week ( each barrel is 36 gallons ) and they are sold to discerning pubs in Kent and Sussex .
4 We all liked Alfred very much , and our sympathy goes out to all his family . ’
5 I DID not see the London Marathon this weekend , and so can not complain about it too loudly , but my heartfelt sympathy goes out to those who found themselves confronted by 25,000 runners , all anxious to show how goodhearted they were and what fun they were having .
6 Lord Lawson lines up alongside other members of the old guard such as Lord Howe , the late Lord Ridley and Lady Thatcher herself , who have been banging on the monetarist drum with the message that the deficit is one of the keys to the economy .
7 An intense young woman , passionate about her are — and perhaps less passionate about being regarded as a ‘ portraitist ’ — Sarah kicks out against preconceived notions of current portraiture .
8 But Mum goes on about that wretched place as though he was chief jailer at Broadmoor .
9 Well A Alison goes out for one evening so that means I have to get back early for that evening
10 This concerns the stages a case goes through from initial instructions to its conclusion and the physical appearance of the file throughout that time .
11 Since many people are unable to meet the costs of litigation from their own resources , the availability of representation under the legal aid scheme will often be the crucial factor in deciding whether the case goes on at all .
12 As I have already noted , some kind of political change goes on at all times , produced by the succession of generations , the rise and fall of dynasties , competition among various social groups , economic and cultural developments , changing external circumstances , and more idiosyncratic factors , which can only be understood fully through detailed historical studies .
13 William Howitt , in his Rural Life in England , 1838 , wrote of the Dent knitters , ‘ The knitting goes on with unremitting speed … they burn no candle but knit by the light of the peat fire . ’
14 News from Parliament in these programmes goes out to huge audiences ; some 11 to 15 million people watch the main national news .
15 The world at that instant splits up into many worlds , in each of which one of the possible results of the measurement is the one that actually occurs .
16 MY heart goes out to all Scotsmen and women , who watched the World Cup Third-Place Play-off at Cardiff .
17 Let's go to see you tomorrow Other languages have PrOnominal systems much richer than the English one : in Japanese , pronouns are distinguished also with respect to sex of speaker , social status of referent and degree of intimacy with referent , so , for example , the second person pronoun kimi can be glossed " you , addressed by this intimate male speaker " ( Uyeno , 1971 : 16-17 ; Harada , 1976 : 511 ) ; and village Tamil has up to six singular second person pronouns according to degree of relative rank between speaker and addressee ( Brown & Levinson , 1978 : 3206 ) .
18 The present looks back at some great figure of an earlier century and wonders , Was he on our side ?
19 If it be objected that no beginning writer shops around in this way among the idioms handed down to him from the past , the evidence is that certain beginning writers do shop around in just this way ; Ezra Pound was one of them , and he is by no means so exceptional as is supposed .
20 Aldergrove stands by for big take-off
21 Division adds up to few rhythmic pluses
22 Piero Fornasetti lives on in these pure silk ties
23 One building stands out in this dispiriting panorama of post-war mediocrity : a dark powerful mass of brickwork with a tall central tower that stands right across the Thames from Wren 's dome .
24 In this chapter , we have assumed the worst possible case — i.e. the syntax/semantics component needs up to ten words of the utterance in order to prefer one of the alternatives — and this is why the statistics are based on the total number of complete word strings derived from the different kinds of input to the lexical access component .
25 ‘ The action goes along at break-neck velocity to reach its conclusion and so there is no problem with the audience fidgeting . ’
26 What worries Spenser is how human action fits in with this determined overall scheme of things whose main signposts can be discerned in Scripture , but whose timetable and precise unravelling are not clear .
27 Then we then he says , then wha well cos what we 're saying is , then if your barrelage goes up to four barrels , say
28 IBM 'S POWER OPEN ASSOCIATION KICKS OFF WITH FIVE SPONSORS — MORE IN THE WINGS
29 If the pilot light goes out for any reason , a heat-sensing thermocouple detects the fault and prevents the main gas supply from operating .
30 The Virgilianism of Hardy cries out for further investigation .
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