Example sentences of "[verb] [adv prt] [pron] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Provided that there shall at all times [ during the Shop Opening Hours ] be full and sufficient common parts to enable the Tenant or any undertenant to carry on its normal business at the Premises
2 1 Common parts The right for the Tenant and all persons expressly or by implication authorised by the Tenant ( in common with the Landlord and all other persons having a like right ) to use the Common Parts for all proper purposes in connection with the use and enjoyment of the Premises provided that the Landlord shall not be obliged to keep the malls and other pedestrian ways open [ to the general public ] earlier than [ one hour ] before the Shop Opening Hours or later than [ one hour ] after the Shop Opening Hours It will be for the landlord and the tenant to negotiate shop opening hours at the commencement of the term and which from the tenant 's point of view should be sufficient for the tenant to carry on its normal trade and business .
3 Sussex members take this opportunity to thank Pat for starting the East Grinstead Rally and assure her of their intention to carry on her good work .
4 It is hard to carry on our pleasant banter in the face of Calvin 's unexplained hostility .
5 I will try to slant my handwriting to be more adult like , I will try to get many merit points , I will try to get at the top sets for every lesson you are in the top sets for every lesson do well in them , I want to carry on my good progress in the sports area , I do many sports now and I want to do more
6 But there 's a huge weight to carry on his wasted muscles .
7 It was n't fair , just or right for the Signora to come before the hour appointed ; she should have been admitted by Giovanna herself and the keys should have remained hanging on their appointed hook ; the other set being in the pocket of Giovanna 's overall from which she now drew them and held them up making it clear that they would be relinquished only upon her death and then only into the hands of Signor Kettering .
8 Pendant lights , usually hanging on their own flex from a ceiling rose , are the most common form of general tungsten lighting — ideally , there should n't be just one light in the centre of a room , but two or more around the room , including over any table .
9 She sighed with relief and steered him towards a gate half hanging on its rusted hinges .
10 Oliver 's tears were genuine now ; he sobbed in the dreary , hopeless way of a tired child , his head hanging on his frail neck like a heavy flower .
11 Similarly , our modern managers bring on their favoured assistants , introduce them to the secrets of the filofax and the business lunch , and teach them how to influence important people .
12 At one end we should have the ancient Palace of Westminster bringing down our historical associations from the times of the early Saxon kings , and at the other we should have the Palace of Whitehall carrying them on to the revolution …
13 I had a lesson with him and he told me that if I squeezed my knees together I would slow down my bottom half and be able to release the club as hard as I wanted to .
14 Losing muscle tissue will slow down your metabolic rate , and this is just what you do n't want .
15 As the light had caressed the window in my room early the next morning , implying that the world had begun to awaken , I was already up , dressed in clean crisp fabrics of my school uniform , a new and unwelcome experience to me , and gobbling down my two Weetabix and Marmite toast for breakfast .
16 Daisy suddenly wanted to check her face , and when he went off at the end of the chukka to talk to the next group playing , which included Perdita , she toned down her rosy cheeks and drenched her neck with Je Reviens , but failed to put the top back on properly , so it stank out the Land-Rover .
17 She laid down her Cosmopolitan magazine , open at fashions , loose flowing shirts in jewel colours .
18 The son of a schoolmaster , James lived in he small town of Tunapuna near the capital , Port of Spain .
19 West German attention remained centred on the affairs of Central Europe — nor had the Germans either completely liberated themselves from or lived down their own past .
20 He flung down his soft hat and cane , crossed to where she stood , took her hand .
21 It was built over 1,800 years ago but , incredibly , some sections still stand almost to their original height , and there is still plenty to see along its whole length .
22 Kyle of Lochalsh is the next port of call , and the way to it from Plockton returns to the T-junction at Duirinish , turns along its main street and skirts the next village of Drumbuie , scene of a great hullabaloo two decades ago when a proposal to construct an oilrig installation off-shore was repulsed by spirited opposition , a home subsequently being found for it on an uninhabited shore of Loch Kishorn .
23 In the role of clients , these local leaders bring in their own supporters behind their patron , in return receiving political advancement for themselves and small benefits for the union ( Rothstein 1979 ) .
24 Well you see , you bring in your dark strokes
25 Joan , who is 70 and lives in Formby , filled in her last number at 10.05pm but had to wait till 9am the next day to check if she had won .
26 They often do this by letting out or bringing in their mooring line , so keep an eye on them to see which direction they move it in , if at all .
27 Well I think it is impossible for anyone to totally avoid bringing in their own values into work that they 're doing to some extent , but I think it is possible to deliberately set out to involve the values of other people in the way that you carry out the work .
28 we have people who know a lot about the subject , and others who are bringing in their own items for us to assess
29 The Russians do n't like outsiders bringing in their own machinery . ’
30 In England the criticism of continued military activity by John Wyclif , the opposition to war expressed by men of Lollard sympathies such as William Swynderby , the lassitude provoked by so many years of conflict , mirrored in some of the works of Geoffrey Chaucer and John Gower , are indicative both of people 's reflection regarding the morality of war and the ways in which it was being fought , and of the apparent futility of allowing it to continue along its present drift , no real advantage accruing to either side in spite of the great cost , both human and financial , to all .
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