Example sentences of "[verb] away in a [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | And he cited two papers , co-authored by Derek Bryce-Smith , professor of organic chemistry at the University of Reading , as being the result of ‘ individual scientists who have got rather carried away in a flush of enthusiasm . ’ |
2 | Weeks of floating had made her fat and idle , but she flipped into the waves and swam away in a flurry of wings and flippers , raising a snowstorm of foam . |
3 | Maxol 's Homewarm 600 heat generator , with a maximum output of 6kW , can be hidden away in a kitchen cupboard . |
4 | Father keeps them hidden away in a room off his library . ’ |
5 | For instance , if the clause imposing the obligation only to exercise reasonable endeavours were hidden away in a set of standard terms on the back of a quotation offering in unequivocal terms to paint the house , and the job was otherwise obviously a straightforward one , it is hard to see how reliance on the clause would be reasonable . |
6 | I point it out because it is hidden away in a lot of business about freedom of information and other issues about which he is so keen . |
7 | You can even scan for viruses that would normally be missed by a standard scanner because it would have been hidden away in an archive file . |
8 | ‘ Once they realised they could n't get any money they ran out of the shop and I think they got away in a car . ’ |
9 | Try to plan to seat at least six comfortably , and also have some really occasional chairs that can be stashed away in a cupboard somewhere or brought in from the hall or a bedroom . |
10 | The blueness goes away in a day or two . |
11 | His quiet rage about the papers , and the idiots who paid good money for them , grew more intense as he began to grind away in a job as a research assistant at the Financial Times . |
12 | The adamantium floor down there was inscribed with a maze of tiny coloured channels that bootsteps would never be able to wear away in a pattern suggestive of a cosmic map — and along all of those channels were spaced little indentations the depth of a Fist 's thumbprint , each recess named with a rune . |
13 | He knew that the police station was tucked away in a square behind the main street , next to a school . |
14 | He describes a skylark 's nest which he found tucked away in a hoof print : ‘ Behind a clod/ how snug the nest/ is in a horse 's footing fixed/ of twitch and stubbles roughly dressed/ with roots and horsehair intermixed . ’ |
15 | Oh yet , it was tucked away in a cupboard , and was immobile and almost unplayable ! |
16 | Foldaway slippers for the flight are tucked away in a holdall with disposable nappies and sick tablets . |
17 | Got some at home apparently tucked away in a piggy bank or something . |
18 | Although it was amongst the women 's glossies as promised , it was still tucked away in a corner with only its spine showing . |
19 | Tucked away in a corner of the rear panel is a small stick-on label saying , Made in Taiwan . |
20 | He was tucked away in a corner , the only man on his own , a solitary candle illuminating his face as he pored over the paper on which he was writing . |
21 | And by the same token that clever little bistro Piers and Amanda found tucked away in a cellar behind Herne Hill tube station was definitely out . |
22 | Karelius , about to agree , suddenly turned away in a fit of coughing . |
23 | We soon roared away in a cloud of dust , shoulder to ribcage with the largest man I have ever seen in my life . |
24 | AN ELDERLY woman dozed off on her sofa — and was almost whisked away in a coffin . |
25 | They were brought in shiploads and bundled away in an institution which a Swiss newspaper recently called ‘ an antechamber of death ’ and a British journal ‘ a modern entrance to Hades ’ . |
26 | Twenty-five years ago , a building contract was regarded by surveyors , clients and contractors alike as something to be signed , put away in a filing cabinet and brought out only in the unlikely event of a dispute . |
27 | ‘ It must be awful being old and put away in a home because no one will have you at home and look after you . ’ |
28 | He dreaded her reaction : seeing her wriggle and flick her tail and swim away in a sea of lies — or seeing her pop like a burst balloon . |
29 | She 's going away in a couple of weeks with the Brownies |
30 | Goodey making a change for the benefit of the scheme members paying into a scheme , rather than employers going away in a contribution holiday . |