Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [pron] [adj] way " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Yet Offred and Serena ( Faye Dunaway , who was more threatening in the terrible costume bash The Wicked Lady ) not only discuss their bizarre way of life , they argue about it . |
2 | Rob Phone , Mr and Mrs National Holidays , and the journalist they met on the train have all gone their separate ways now , but perhaps a little enriched , a little relaxed , by a modicum of light , meaningless conversation . |
3 | He says that they more or less go their separate ways , Felicity and this green fellow she 's married to . |
4 | We rarely challenge our habitual way of doing something . |
5 | Obviously existing kitchens can be made more efficient with more up-to-date equipment — bigger freezer and/or fridge , a dishwasher , waste disposal unit and so on — but only if the appliances work hard for you , save time and labour and generally make your particular way of life easier and more enjoyable . |
6 | The woman who gave this account thereafter changed her established way of life to become an activist in the Greenham Common protest against the siting there of cruise missiles . |
7 | Jointly scripted by Babenco and Jean-Claude Carriere , the film explores the bitter consequences of contact between white civilisation and the Niaruna Indians who still pursue their ancestral way in the heart of the forest . |
8 | The impact of molecular biology will eventually revolutionise our whole way of thinking about cancer and is management , but for the time being three areas are receiving particular attention : |
9 | Then we can both go our separate ways . ’ |
10 | they nearly did it brilliant way , remember I had the little labels on them and they 've all got mixed up one way or another |
11 | The ploughman homeward plods his weary way , |
12 | There is without a shadow of doubt some very nasty gossip about me now sludging its filthy way through the intestines of the society I know and have come to despise . |
13 | In fact , most of the central section has all but disappeared , the river now wending its subterranean way beneath the town . |
14 | ‘ At first the pilots and navigators will mostly go their separate ways and concentrate on the subjects peculiar to their own calling , but after about a week they will be crewed-up — one pilot , one nav/observer , and one nav/plotter to a crew on the bomber side and a pilot and a navigator on the PR — and from then on will attend lectures and do drills as crew members . |
15 | The only survivors are , appropriately , the participants of the convention who wander the streets before eventually making their respective ways home in a repetition of the opening scene . |
16 | After a long gallop to Radstock our two heroes then made their weary way back to Crediton where they made their final assault . |
17 | She nodded as Topaz curtsied and then made her stately way to where Sister Agnes was sewing drawers for her Sisters in God . |
18 | Then show your tax-efficient ways of meeting your investment objectives . |
19 | The royal couple then went their separate ways the prince to a business seminar and the princess to a department store promotion of British goods . |
20 | We swapped a few anecdotes about buffoons we had encountered and then went our separate ways , hands thrust deep into our respective double-thickness , Gortex , all-weather , storm-force shell outers . |
21 | Both rows converge upon St Machar 's Cathedral , and then wander their separate ways through Seaton Park to the River Don , and eventually the Brig o' Balgownie — ; although Johnson does not seem to have walked that far . |
22 | I thought the two rivers both rising on Plynlimmon and then flowing their separate ways like brother and sister then meeting down under the Severn Bridge — I thought that provided a very nice theme for this beautiful border country |
23 | Unfortunately , his favourite pastime was kidnapping innocent virgins , holding them prisoner in his cave while he presumably had his wicked way with them , and then lowering them sixty metres down to waiting boats to be sold into slavery … ’ |