Example sentences of "[vb past] [adv] [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | As they crept slowly forward over the plain his eyes searched for those tiny villages made of mud with their bamboo groves and their ponds ; and though the plain was perfectly flat the villages were somehow hidden in its folds , blending with it . |
2 | At dinner the undergraduate in his second year got on well with the ex-prime minister , which is a mark up to both sides . |
3 | Ex-US Army paramedic Matthew Brafman , 33 , had ‘ a reasonable bedside manner ’ and got on well with the patients at the geriatric hospital where he worked . |
4 | He liked what he saw of the school and got on well with the Chairman of the Governors , a fellow classicist . |
5 | Both Rachel and Nina got on well with the men , who in turn liked and respected the nursing team , and usually there was an easy-going air of camaraderie in the centre . |
6 | And I enjoyed it , it was quite good , I got on well with the staff . |
7 | I got on well with the teachers there before I went to Bridge Road . |
8 | He trusts me , we got on well in the old days . |
9 | We got on well from the moment we met and we still see each other from time to time , and talk for hours about the good old days . |
10 | It arose most acutely in the United States which welcomed immigrants but also put pressure on them to turn themselves into English-speaking American citizens as soon as possible , since any rational citizen would wish to be an American . |
11 | Many thatched cottages were built on the brow of a hill overlooking the sea ; and a large potato-field , divided into elongated sections , gave ample scope for many Lewis families to prove that union is strength , for they were busily engaged lifting the crop : each family group was complete in itself ; those who had the most children got most quickly over the ground : many hands make light work , and young backs bend easily . |
12 | The broad gauge lived on only in the Paddington to Penzance expresses , corresponding goods trains and services on feeder lines . |
13 | Nisbet , with his first goal of the season , ultimately revived Rangers ' European ambitions and no matter how fortuitous his strike was , it may yet turn out to be of inestimable value to an Ibrox team who clung on bravely in the closing stages . |
14 | A few crofting families clung on there until the 19th century but the island is now uninhabited . |
15 | Mrs Roberts , indeed , who felt completely disoriented , clung on absurdly to the reality of Martin Parr . |
16 | The triumph of Atlanticism , however , became clear only towards the end of the 1940s , driven by necessity and the absence of more appealing alternatives . |
17 | He was ‘ Lord Haw-Haw of Hamburg , in the darkest days of the war when Britain fought on alone against the might of the Fascist dictators . ’ |
18 | Of all the cities in the north , Milan was the one that expanded most rapidly in the period up to 1100 . |
19 | His partners , brought to the sticking point , agreed , somewhat reproachfully , and passed on firmly to the question of who was going to take over which of Angela 's clients . |
20 | The guard did as he was told , then stood back , watching as Tolonen limped slowly across to the corpse . |
21 | That succeeded only partially in the setting , but the costumes were attractive . |
22 | As he says to one of their tools : When Buckingham presents his credentials for deceiving the London citizens it is in the same theatrical-Machiavellian terms as Richard : But Buckingham himself is deceived , as we realized long ago in the flurry of insincere praise that Richard heaped upon him : Buckingham should have known that such effusiveness from a hypocrite can only bode ill . |
23 | Darren , 21 , said : ‘ The smoke was very dense , so I got down low on the floor and pushed the kitchen door open . |
24 | They clung so tenaciously to the idea that Rose felt she could n't stand in their way . |
25 | He found the predatory birds oriented less accurately to the alarm calls , as Marler would have predicted . |
26 | The assumptions made so far about the input-output relations of the economy have been simplistic in the extreme . |
27 | Ralph Bryant read out the hundred and seventh psalm the following Sunday at the morning service in St Saviour 's , and the congregation listened with rapt attention to those words which applied so directly to the men and boys who were to sail in the Russell that day : |
28 | The excavators at Silchester and Caerwent had found great quantities , but regarded it as merely so commonplace and ordinary , that they hardly bothered even to mention it , thus ignoring the important principle laid down earlier by the great Pitt-Rivers , who attempted to record everything he found ‘ however small and however common … common things are of more importance than particular things , because they are more prevalent ’ ( 1898 , 27 ) . |
29 | The big truck shuddered to a halt , spraying gravel from under its locked wheels , as Rocky tramped down hard on the brakes . |
30 | When we saw Helen Stoner 's light , Holmes and I got in quietly through the window . |