Example sentences of "[noun sg] [conj] [adv prt] through the " in BNC.

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1 The first people in each team place the keys down their neck and out through the bottom of their trouser legs or slacks .
2 In this way , the compressions or sound waves pass through the throat and mouth and out through the lips , spreading in all directions .
3 Using a skewer , make two holes in the carrot by pushing it in one side and out through the other .
4 It grew until it was a window and out through the window she could see down a long tunnel ; and beyond that the sun shining and the mountains rising over the fruit trees .
5 She poked again — dug right down to the bottom and up through the shambles came something that signalled with painful clarity .
6 Flat on his stomach , he slid across the cockpit to lead the other two lines over the taffrail and back through the portside stern anchor cleat to the portside winch .
7 Robyn followed as a determined Melissa led Luke , whose expression resembled that of a prisoner about to be given his last rites , across the field and in through the french windows .
8 Breathe in through the nose and out through the mouth , slowly , rhythmically .
9 Then by common consent we crab-walked through the foyer and out through the main doors , like kids escaping from double Greek which , in a way , we were .
10 Cawthorne walked back to the farmhouse and in through the front door .
11 This walk takes you through the Whinlatter Forest and up through the trees to the top of Grisedale Pike at 2,593ft .
12 She could imagine it clanging across the hall , up the stairway , along the draughty corridors , around the drawing-room and out through the open windows .
13 There was a cry , followed shortly by a pounding of feet past the trench and down through the orchard , then silence , except for a rumble of artillery somewhere in the distance .
14 It took him two days , making three journeys a day — down the slippery path through the forest , then a mile along the river-bank , across the permanent bridge and up through the fields to the village .
15 First , the sight of one of the huntsmen galloping at full speed up the drive , over the bridge and in through the ornamental gates , throwing himself off his still cantering horse , and running into the house through one of the entrances below the main staircase .
16 This often means using it ‘ reverse flow ’ — that is with water pumped down the uplift and up through the gravel , thereby keeping the gravel cleaner and less clogged than ‘ standard flow ’ systems where detritus is sucked into the gravel .
17 We wandered past the Delhi Gate and on through the crumbling streets of Old Delhi ; as we went , Pakeezah stared sadly around her .
18 In the darkness , we padded across the dank , wet velvet floor and out through the kitchen wall into a street whose hollow buildings leaned outwards .
19 Quick kiss on the cheek for Lucy and Frieda , watch their skinny legs scuttle across the yard and in through the corrugated iron hut 's battered doors .
20 ‘ He swirled his black necromancer 's cloak about her , and he carried her from the Sun Chamber and out through the great doors , and out into the night and none could stop him .
21 Water is sucked through and around charcoal-impregnated filter sponges into the undergravel plate and up through the gravel .
22 So I expect somebody 's been and er the er the door thing , you can get in the back way and in through the back door .
23 Then I discovered the Bulgarian women 's choirs , ‘ Le Mystre Des Voix Bulgares ’ — it 's really funny to hear this stuff come screaming out of your subconscious and out through the amplifier …
24 Not like the old one — bottle of pink medicine and out through the door before you can say knife … ’
25 and we went in from the end and er down the pitch and in through the saw the physio room and the , the changing room , baths upstairs saw the trophy .
26 Taking a deep breath , Terry nodded , and as though she too had forgotten Ellie she walked slowly towards her brother and out through the door .
27 A cloud of cigarette smoke hangs over the group , slowly wafting over the television set and out through the open window .
28 We had crowd-flow blockages , insufficient refreshment facilities , no VIP entrance , no security check until people were in the main auditorium , and no way to get backstage except by walking right through the main meeting , up the stairs onto the stage and out through the back — with everybody watching !
29 And in a second he was under the Man 's arm and out through the cage door , free and gliding over towards the fence by the benches .
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