Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] [prep] [prep] a " in BNC.
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1 | I do n't really want to go on to for a few minutes . |
2 | A long-net is erected in from of a wood to demonstrate its appearance . |
3 | But it is memories that are all he can hang on to in a world of ‘ new men , strange faces , other minds ’ . |
4 | But if you have a reasonable cross section of the country and your result was still that Birmingham was looked down upon as a low status accent , then at least you can your results so . . |
5 | Here on this east side are the exaggerated sweeping gables , the cottagey front door with its hinges forged with heart-shaped ends ( a trade mark of Mr Voysey ) , the elaborate gutters , the pebble-dash over the two-feet-thick stone walls , and the cosy , comforting scale of the whole , so nice to come home to on a wet and windy evening . |
6 | Suppose I leap out from behind a tree , and by sheer surprise frighten you . |
7 | Aggravation flares like a lit blowtorch , and a Black Maria cruises out from round a corner to pull up behind the cars . |
8 | Time to come out from under a cloud and enjoy yourself . |
9 | Time to come out from under a cloud and enjoy yourself . |
10 | Time to come out from under a cloud and enjoy yourself . |
11 | Was this all she had to come back to after a day 's work ? |
12 | Er the upshot of that is er that the motion for Cardiff conference er has been ruled out er because it 's not a national conference it 's a federal one , so I 've got caught out on on a technicality there , er but we have put in er an amendment to another motion submitted for Cardiff er not that one erm a motion submitted er by South West Herts er which concentrates on the M Twenty Five . |
13 | What may have been looked forward to as a release may instead be an unexpected let-down , with retirement from work adding to the feeling of helplessness and lack of purpose . |
14 | But I am sorry to tell you that he passed away on after a massive stroke . |
15 | Also Bosanquet has argued vigorously for over a decade — and has not been alone — that this suggests that younger age cohorts are growing up fitter and will not necessarily need such varied and prolonged care in the future . |
16 | The road , now heading east once more , climbs onward to within a short walk 's distance from that same awesome Rhone glacier before tackling the highest pass of the trip , the Furka ( 2,431m , 7,974ft ) , which forms the boundary between cantons Valais and Uri . |
17 | Slim tree trunks with the branches cut down to within a foot of the bole were placed against the battlements , and men began to climb up them . |
18 | Because it , cos people were you know erm as is often said generally of of a of a general staffs of armies . |
19 | The car , already doing eight-five , roared up to over a hundred . |
20 | He suddenly darted out from behind a metal ladder and Whitlock aimed at his legs . |
21 | Crawled out from under a stone more like . |
22 | The first person I ever came out to as a student was a person I suspected of being gay and everyone else thought he was gay ; in fact , he vehemently denied it after I came out . |
23 | Just then the moon came out from behind a cloud . |
24 | The sun came out from behind a cloud , and shone on the stone walls of Fullcircle . |
25 | Manage thus expresses notionally the movement of approach signified by to from a position before the event up to the point where its realization begins . |
26 | Altogether 33 countries approved a draft treaty , drawn up at Basel last March , which called for the toxic waste trade to be regulated instead of for a total ban . |
27 | I 'm going down in about a month 's time . |
28 | Many plotters come complete with software that allows them to be used directly from within a program , rather like a paper copy of the screen . |
29 | He spins back to his family , snatching the napkin from his collar , his chin jutting righteously from beneath a press-lipped mouth . |
30 | It 's a performance story that 's been adding up for over a decade . |