Example sentences of "[noun sg] [v-ing] [adv prt] through the " in BNC.
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1 | My eyes shut , I could see that napkin fluttering down through the mushroom cloud . |
2 | It was cold , too , an icy wind sneaking in through the thatch and through gaps in the mud wall . |
3 | ‘ But I think it is a pointless exercise , ’ said Floy , somewhere towards morning , a thin , cold light filtering in through the windows to where he sat at a great desk , his black hair tumbled , hollows in his cheeks , his face white with fatigue . |
4 | Then our eyes will be firmly caught and firmly held by a bent female figure hurrying in through the door and across the room towards us . |
5 | Then , he had become aware of a gout of light pouring down through the trees , and an ache of green against his eyes . |
6 | Or was it the east wind blowing in through the open bell tower with renewed force ? |
7 | Hark at the wind coming in through the |
8 | KOD belong to and older and , dare I say , bolder tradition of British independent rock stretching back through The Bunnymen , The Banshees , The Cocteau Twins and The Smiths . |
9 | He cut power , toe snapping up through the gears . |
10 | I can remember the red deer on the hills below our homesite , ’ whispered Creggan in reply , his gaze passing out through the cage to the warm evening beyond , ‘ as they came grazing in herds along the distant glen . |
11 | Or it could be the boy going down through the field and scaring them . |
12 | Suddenly they were in a huge , enchanting sitting-room , with the sun pouring in through the open French windows that gave a magnificent view out over the bay . |
13 | Th the strong highlight on the reflection on the water obviously is a thing which makes the picture as , and also the , the sort of rays of sun coming down through the cloud . |
14 | Painfully , looking up at him , she saw a good strong profile , sandy hair tipped with gold from the sun coming in through the lace-curtained window . |
15 | A heavy south easterly swell rolling in through the wide sounds to the north of Bressay threw Venturous on her beam ends several times , so much so that fuel oil spilled over through the deck breather pipes . |
16 | In the summer , with the sun slanting in through the window , with the deep tan wallpaper , and the overall colour scheme of tan and creams , it looked lovely , but in the depths of winter it looked vaguely soiled , and depressingly dull . |
17 | Those wonderful mornings in summer when the larks rose high over the mountains and you woke to the sound of cowbells and the sun streaming in through the window ? |
18 | Hazel peered closely into the thick , coarse hair ( a rabbit 's foot has no pads ) and after a few moments saw what he had expected — the oval shank Of a snapped-off thorn sticking out through the skin . |
19 | She had been waiting on Dreadnought to watch the water coming in through the main leak . |
20 | The draught coming in through the ventilation ducts made it tremble continuously . |
21 | Shielding the flame carefully from the draught sweeping in through the open door , Isabel glanced about the single room . |
22 | So they risked all , and late one night when she heard a low whistle she rose from her straw pallet in the lower scullery and crept out of the house ; and when Tristram had climbed over the wall , she gave herself to him there on the midnight grass with the summer moon blazing down through the trees and the scent of honey wafting up from the silent hives . |
23 | The light from a standard lamp caught the hair bubbling up through the open neck of his shirt and on the backs of his arms . |
24 | And er the car arrives I looked all I could see was mother sitting in the car and puffing this smoke puffing out through the window |
25 | I thought we were going to have a visitor coming in through the back door . |
26 | In one case the Divisional Court held that assault was committed where a woman was frightened by the sight of a man looking in through the window of her house , although there seems to have been little suggestion that the man was threatening to apply force either immediately or at all . |
27 | Ore from this operation had been brought up his Bonsor East Shaft , approx. 359 feet in depth , which was really a clear , roughly timbered space extending up through the stopes . |
28 | its tail curling in through the quarter-light . |
29 | In the patchy moonlight filtering down through the latticework of branches above , he could see no lurking figures . |
30 | Slowly struggling up from the depths of deep unconsciousness , Laura flicked open her eyelids , only to shut them firmly again as she winced at the brilliant sunshine flooding in through the windows of the bedroom . |