Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | The crops were stacked right up to the roof ridge , or close to it , so using almost all the roof space . |
2 | Lesley turned smartly left as the lights changed , and wound her way by back-streets to the parking-ground on the edge of the shopping centre , a multi-storey monstrosity of raw concrete , at which she gazed with resigned distaste as she crept slowly up to the barrier and drove in to the second tier . |
3 | As they crept slowly forward over the plain his eyes searched for those tiny villages made of mud with their bamboo groves and their ponds ; and though the plain was perfectly flat the villages were somehow hidden in its folds , blending with it . |
4 | This waistcoat had flap-pockets and reached down almost to the knees : it was fastened right up to the neck with horse-shoe buttons , leaving just enough space for the red-spotted muffler or wrapper to be seen underneath . |
5 | Again and again he swiped at Chloe , but she remained convinced that this was a game and every time her friend approached she darted away and went to sit somewhere else in the clearing , her tail brushing the ground frantically . |
6 | When the little animal is disturbed it burrows furiously down into the ground until it has completely disappeared except for its horny rump . |
7 | and that goes right up to the window yeah , and the time that , we had seven firms |
8 | The hole goes right through to the inner mechanism and was therefore the source of the oil leak , 19 this hole necessary for the diaphragm to work independent of the crankcase pressure fluctuations or is there some kind of seal missing or broken ? |
9 | It goes right through to the bathroom does n't it ? |
10 | The quiet period starts on the eighteenth of May and it goes right through until the twenty first of June . |
11 | If , however , top-selling weekly music papers are more your cup of tea , then this well-worn proverb goes right out of the window . |
12 | This Aladdin goes right back to the 1,001 Nights , showing us Scheherezade ( Eartha Kitt ) being turned into the Genie of the Ring and the Caliph of Baghdad ( Sylvester McCoy ) into the Slave of the Lamp by the Grand Vizier Abanazer ( Peter Blake as a deliciously over-the-top wicked uncle ) . |
13 | ‘ It had to be Windsor , too — not Balmoral or Sandringham but the castle that goes right back to the Normans — and the Queen 's favourite chapel , stripped to a skeleton of its former self . |
14 | Sam said , frowning , ‘ You ca n't have dived out under the curtain , it goes right down to the river bed . ’ |
15 | The legislation was resented bitterly enough by the Netherlands to lead to a war in which the English Republic was able to assert itself against the Dutch Republic . |
16 | However , at the end of the film , the car driven by Mark ( Sean Connery ) drives right down to the end of the road , and instead of falling into the ( non-existent ) harbour , turns right into a previously unsuspected street or quay along its edge and disappears from view . |
17 | Its colour void led to clean , efficient lines which had an appeal that passed right down to the high street . |
18 | The Warlords had already marched right out of the arena . |
19 | At dinner the undergraduate in his second year got on well with the ex-prime minister , which is a mark up to both sides . |
20 | Ex-US Army paramedic Matthew Brafman , 33 , had ‘ a reasonable bedside manner ’ and got on well with the patients at the geriatric hospital where he worked . |
21 | He liked what he saw of the school and got on well with the Chairman of the Governors , a fellow classicist . |
22 | Both Rachel and Nina got on well with the men , who in turn liked and respected the nursing team , and usually there was an easy-going air of camaraderie in the centre . |
23 | And I enjoyed it , it was quite good , I got on well with the staff . |
24 | I got on well with the teachers there before I went to Bridge Road . |
25 | He trusts me , we got on well in the old days . |
26 | We got on well from the moment we met and we still see each other from time to time , and talk for hours about the good old days . |
27 | It arose most acutely in the United States which welcomed immigrants but also put pressure on them to turn themselves into English-speaking American citizens as soon as possible , since any rational citizen would wish to be an American . |
28 | Rates have fallen most sharply in the South East , where the going rate now averages £3.80 a week , £1.40 less than last year . |
29 | Signed to a major label , The Wedding Present sit rather awkwardly on the edge of acceptance into mainstream pop . |
30 | But the steady drip of disclosures , which appears certain to continue right up to the general election later this year , could yet prove fatal to the Congress ( I ) Party 's chances of remaining in power . |