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

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1 The band was down below and then a loft , a long wooden just like a dance hall up above and they just did that and they just they had tables set and then they removed them for the dances .
2 ( Tramp art is an old American form of folk art in which small pieces of wood are laid together and then a plaster cast taken . )
3 ‘ We just need to put a couple of wins together and then the ball will be rolling again . ’
4 Let the mother 's clean up the baby and then , then teach them how to go outside and then the bitch will with her puppies
5 And then they used to go with their slate and and they knew it altogether and then the counter turns and turns like that .
6 Richard opened slowly and then the cock was in and he could see only Martin 's glistening blond hair between his legs .
7 ‘ Just once more and then a wound , an injury .
8 I used to cut them all up and they used to leave me the legs , you know , the hams and the backs and they used to have a few joints off and take home and then the rest I used to lay it , put it into bacon down the cellar .
9 The jets came home and then the maintenance and support staff .
10 The Magistrate , standing in hesitation on the verandah , was illuminated by a rare shaft of watery sunlight for a moment and his whiskers flared more brilliantly than ever but then the sun moved on , extinguishing them .
11 There were tough qualifying conditions in the heats : the first in each heat automatically and then a number of the fastest losers .
12 ‘ They did n't see anything because they were working in their little tent , ’ she went on , ‘ but they did hear someone hurrying past and then a car starting up a little way away .
13 Now and then a door slammed , sending metallic echoes rolling along the corridors .
14 It was not that each child was continually talking but every now and then a child would speak to his neighbour or another would leave his place quietly and walk over to another child to speak with him .
15 Every now and then a dad would swagger in and talk to her with reverence but also with a certain courtly gaiety .
16 Florence Nightingale has been the inspiration for twentieth-century nursing ; every now and then a historian attempts to point out that there may have been aspects of her life which were not quite so saintly as we believe , but this does not shatter her image .
17 At this time of night the street was quiet : the occasional car , and now and then a group of rowdy youths asserting their masculinity like stags in rut .
18 Even so , the air was full of spray and every now and then a drift of spume , like soap suds , whipped past on the wind .
19 Every now and then a jack pike would rupture the tranquillity as it marauded the easy pickings .
20 Occasionally he heard the distant sound of traffic on the main road ; now and then a dog barked somewhere in the village .
21 Every now and then the fossil record throws up fossils which are palaeontological puzzles .
22 Every now and then the sun came out , lighting up women out walking with prams and push chairs .
23 Every now and then the timing is just right for that four square magic to be stirred again .
24 The next village just down the road Lartington stayed loyal to the Church of Rome which led to a spot of tension now and then The Church of England established their place of worship in 1796 then built St Cuthberts in 1881 and a school in 1894 .
25 The " alert " is sounded and a plane flies overhead every five minutes or so — the usual monotonous droning sound of the engines is heard and now and then the pop-pop of the guns and occasionally you feel the sensation of a slight earthquake when a bomb drops —
26 ‘ There will now be a recommendation to strike put before our annual conference in May but I hope that between now and then the Government sees sense . ’
27 Every now and then the launch took a larger wave on her starboard bow and she would shy away like a frightened colt .
28 Yes , every now and then the temptation to do something sort of very cool and very sort of ten point Univers and you do it for a bit , and you 've done it and then you use some proper faces instead .
29 Daniel Defoe describes the Fens shrouded in fog , through which nothing could be seen ‘ but now and then the lanthorn or cupola of Ely Minster ’ .
30 I find this very difficult to erm , to relate , to relate hard work to the women portraying in , in this , we 've got the postcard of that one , erm it must of been hard work and very tedious , but I think every now and then the moment breaks away and shines through at the back , and I think people like , like Gaugin erm captures those moments and then releases them on the canvass , and I hope that erm by , I hope I 've been able to show you how I use art as a voice erm and a friend as my own work , even though we 've maybe had to do such a sort of hand fist way , hand fisted way , erm , but , I , I 've recently started to re-visit old favourite of paintings and I found that the story they tell sometimes has changed dramatically , maybe sometimes when your very little that , that , you know , sometimes dramatically as well , erm , but I , mostly , most importantly its , its still , I still find them , all of them compelling and challenging and , and something to stride for in my own work , erm , er only time will tell so I 'll finish with the , the last poem which is erm comes from the postcard what 's going round which is harvest , its called Patterns In The Grass , Wheat cut and falls , making lion head patterns in the grass , sickle shaped women bend and bow as a naive dressed as a dog steals the evening meal .
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