Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 SUMMER can be hell if you are among the hordes who endure nettle rash , bad reactions to insect bites and stings , sensitivity to sunlight , or any of the allergies which are so common from now right on through the summer .
2 Leaving the rotunda , turn right on to the embankment , Smetanovo nábřeží where there is a fine memorial to Francis II , Emperor of Austria , by J. Kranner , built 1844–6 .
3 The grenade dropped right on to the cab floor in front of Rex .
4 Well it 's not because as I say , they actually park right on to the roundabout .
5 You see well the point was when you pick 'em up erm we had a sm we had a big boat , what we called hanger boat , a very heavy boat and that used to have a wooden so therefore we used to pull it up by hand and pull it ove on a little barrel with a hand power that 's what we used to do and once we got the anchor in board we 'd pull the chain in by hand and then rerun it again right on to the mud and on the anchor again .
6 I 've got to go right on to the end of whatever all this is , because I ca n't go back .
7 They mounted the slight slope and , turning right on to the Westport road , walked towards the village .
8 Once upon a time ( I said , and he stared bitterly bitterly at the floor ) there was a very ugly monster who captured a princess and put her in a dungeon in his castle .
9 ‘ The new organisation is aligned with the change process which is currently ongoing and will enable shift teams to work more effectively right across the terminal , ’ commented Roy Beardall .
10 At the same time , one must remember that there were other aspects of the economy which were virtually unaffected by war ; one sees this in the growth of the mining interest in the North-east , and most conspicuously in the continuation of trading connections with areas even after the political ties which had created them had been broken .
11 Footballers are seen simultaneously as representatives of a club and its traditions , of a community and its collective sensibility and most importantly of a sport beloved by young and impressionable people .
12 In the first phase , the question related most importantly to the organization of the party ; in the second , to the strategy for overthrowing Tsarism ; and in the third , finally , to the overthrow of world capitalism .
13 In one school towards the end of July the staff arrived to discover that the staff room was festooned with balloons and streamers , the wine glasses were dusted off ready for use later in the day but , most importantly on the display board was a very large notice in thick felt pen :
14 The survey found that numbers of Britain 's only native cat , Felix silvestris , have declined throughout Scotland , but most importantly in the north and west , where the cat is genetically purer than any other in Europe .
15 One night we had a crash landing , when a plane from another air field had to land at Bourn in a bit of a hurry , having been shot up rather badly on the way back from Germany .
16 Sir I will take this on board , but I think it comes rather badly from an authority in fact both authorities which have so shown so many confusing changes of mind about this area in the whole process since the first plan was issued , that the er details of the consideration by one of the constituent bodies of this erm objection er should be er examined er in such detail .
17 A few days ago , we saw the appalling spectacle on television of Vietnamese asylum seekers being dragged forcibly on to a plane to be sent back to Vietnam , a very poor country that has suffered economic embargos since 1976 , which have caused great poverty there .
18 I put my candle down on the shelf , and dropped thankfully on to the bed .
19 Some of the people who complain most bitterly about the community charge are those who discover after their homes have been repossessed that they must pay the charge not only on their new property — because it is imposed on the individual — but on the property which they lost , and which they thought was now the responsibility of the building society .
20 ‘ Well , there was this almighty bang an' the bleedin' fing stopped dead right in the middle o' the music .
21 Another , named rather despairingly by the scientist who first examined it Hallucigenia , had seven pairs of limbs beneath and seven tentacles waving above , each of which ended , apparently , with a mouth .
22 In recent years , however , the impassioned and intelligent dinner conversations held over hearty cassoulets , with rapidly emptying bottles of Beauj' or Burgundy , have become the subject of satire ( primarily and most successfully by The Guardian 's cartoonist Posy Simmonds ) .
23 When these various bodies were created , the question of control did arise , most acutely in the case of the nationalized industries .
24 Precious substances contributed most effectively to the functioning of traditional societies by defining roles in the functioning of the hierarchy of authority .
25 6 The adequacy of INSET provision in training teachers to use microcomputers most effectively in the classroom .
26 Since few actuaries will have had much practical experience of teaching before becoming tutors these notes have been prepared to give you some guidance towards helping students most effectively in the context of the tuition system .
27 This view has been expressed most effectively in an article by Fleay and Sanders .
28 It 's interesting that sexuality has been problematised in the seventies and eighties and nineties most effectively by the scholarship emerging from the Women 's Movement erm who 've said that y'know perhaps things are n't quite as equitable as these people have supposed , er perhaps sexuality can be abusive , look at all these instances of rape , of child sex abuse etcetera , sexual harassment and all these kinds of things .
29 There was a young boy there with his cows at the time , and he told Kalchu that he had watched the bull and it had walked slowly right round the circumference of the Kālādika , before lying down where Kalchu had found it .
30 Emily watched him go and then , rising , she threw her napkin down furiously on to the table .
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