Example sentences of "[vb past] [adv] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He crept slowly towards the main corridors .
2 But she could n't forget , as the lights twinkled on around the entire hillside , that this man owned them all , every last apartment , every cypress , every swimming-pool and tennis court .
3 There was a stool nearby , and , climbing on this , Seddon got on to the firm edge of the sink where it met the draining board and reached up to the hatch .
4 He got on to the internal phone and asked for petty cash , not specifying any amount .
5 ‘ We were sent upstairs to address envelopes as ‘ the girls ’ ‘ , she recalls , ‘ while Clive got on with the serious business of deciding about the paper .
6 Gone are the days when professionals left the business of fees , commissions , variation charges , reimbursables and the rest to underlings whilst they got on with the interesting work .
7 After we 'd agreed the itinerary I got on with the detailed flying planning , using the new French VFR maps and the American TPC ( Tactical Pilotage Charts ) which we bought from Stamfords in London .
8 Uncle Titch just shrugged and got on with the important things in life .
9 Even a piece of her mind could cost you dearly if you got on on the wrong side of her .
10 A team of researchers from Bristol University was commissioned to examine what the YTS had to offer young black people and to indicate how they got on during the first six months of the scheme ( S. Fenton , Ethnic Minorities and the Youth Training Scheme Research and Development Series , no. 20 , MSC , 1984 ) .
11 The 1993 event started in York on 14 February and we will report on how they got on in the next issue .
12 All around him , the other England players gradually acclimatised to their new surroundings , pleasantly suprised by the facilities laid on by the Indian authorities .
13 The hospitality extended to a good meal , and before leaving we were given the facilities of a nearby chateau , where the jeep driver and I had the luxury of a hot bath , laid on by the local Mayor .
14 Herds of giraffe and waterbuck raced across the swamps in our shadow as we swooped on to the sandy airstrip .
15 Certainly the geographical scope of European and European-style diplomacy expanded strikingly during the nineteenth century .
16 Although until late in 1912 Picasso and Braque lived in Montmartre and had relatively little contact with the other Cubists who lived mostly on the Left Bank or in the suburbs , they did not live in isolation .
17 Ceylon Tamils , many of whose ancestors had lived in Sri Lanka for perhaps one thousand years , lived mostly in the Northern and Eastern Provinces , outside the purview of this book .
18 We rode slowly down the beaten track .
19 Joseph rode slowly from the southern end of the camp , with five warriors walking beside him and leaning against his horse 's flanks .
20 The oral tradition lived on into the nineteenth and twentieth centuries .
21 Patronage did not die out with industrialization ; it lived on through the honorific offices of county clubs and national bodies .
22 Crossroads lived on under the Central banner , but there were many more changes in store and some viewers did n't like take to those either .
23 Plans agreed on by the first meeting included a shopping trip to Holland to visit a shop which sells outsize jeans and sweat-shirts and another to Germany to a shop which claims to sell the biggest size shoes in the world .
24 UN specialists say that the regulations , plans and treaties agreed on by the Mediterranean countries have not significantly curbed the outpouring of sewage and industrial effluent from the 360 million people who live around the Mediterranean basin .
25 A statement agreed on by the Foreign Ministers asserted " the illegitimacy of all forms of Israeli settlement " in the occupied territories and stressed the importance of " full UN participation " and " effective EC participation " in the peace process .
26 The search for new policies led additionally to the widespread adoption of monetary targets in most economies , including the UK , apparently giving some acceptance of the monetarist claim that inflation is a consequence of a rapid growth in the money supply .
27 The religious zeal of the Portuguese set them apart from their British counterparts , who allowed complete religious freedom and interfered little with the indigenous culture .
28 The scale of private charity expanded remarkably in the mid-nineteenth century and offered considerable protection to the poor against the rigours of the Poor Law .
29 Fraser , impatient at so inactive a role , persuaded the Regent to relieve him and appoint a replacement Deputy Warden , and now rode on with the main cavalry host .
30 Considering themselves to be superior , they cared little for the ordinary person and looked down on the sinners .
  Next page