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

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1 Right down on to Street now .
2 Hatch might have put his daughter 's interests first , and decided that Stone was better off out of things , and two vengeance trails might be too complex for CI5 to handle thoroughly .
3 Stories about being better off out of work apply only to relatively few people , those with large families and particularly exploitative employers .
4 Fourth , social security benefits are so generous that many people are financially better off out of work than at work .
5 Table 16.8 shows that the household is marginally better off out of work than it would have been in work .
6 I followed the cliff path which led steeply up out of Otters ' Bay and then westward over the headland for something less than half a mile , to bring me in sight of the bay I had seen yesterday .
7 ‘ When I think how it was when I joined up … you 're not so badly off down in Florence where at least you 've got a central canteen , but ever since we 've had to do without a resident housekeeper in the smaller stations we 've had to spend half our time teaching mothers ’ boys to cook pasta . ’
8 A head appeared briefly round the corner , then ducked quickly back out of sight as Grant blazed off another shot in its direction .
9 Supporters of both sides could enjoy such matches and the crowd two years later back up in Scotland was enormous and was hoping for a repeat of the excitement .
10 You must keep the attacker at bay with your legs — one leg out ready to kick him with the heel , the other held slightly back out of reach to protect your groin .
11 Climbing up to the right and beyond Cow Dub , I followed the beck , dry where it had drained away through the limestone but flowing where the bands of sandstone outcropped , until on the open fell the limestone gave way to glacial moraine and the beck gurgled noisily back down towards Cow Dub .
12 But , once , I heard their song , a whistling with a magical , far-carrying clarinet quality : ‘ Oooooo-weooo , ’ Hammock-nests , lined with flowery grass heads , are slung high up out of sight across forked branches .
13 Fish plop lazily around out of reach of the heron , who looks across intently at the water flurries .
14 To the north the passes through the Alps brought the traveller to Como or Maggiore , and then on down to Mediolanum .
15 He was fatigued even before the start of the fourth game when he was late back on to court .
16 to get to three and then back on to teletext
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