Example sentences of "[vb past] [prep] the [adj] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | We squelched through the oozy wet mud of the long sea wall at Titchwell Marsh . |
2 | In 1929 a serious dispute over tactics arose between the Communist International and the Mexican Communists . |
3 | Life magazine put him on the cover and that single photograph of Manson , with his evil , hypnotic stare , became for the hysterical mass media , the face of a violent , drug-crazed substrata of society : the monster hidden in the heart of every hippie and longhaired supporter of a culture which seemed certain to encompass an increasing section of youth and bandwagonners . |
4 | ‘ Best hang tight to my arm , boy , ’ he yelled and together they leaned forward and tramped through the long wet grass to wrestle with the Littles ' gate . |
5 | Robyn twisted her head with difficulty and saw the white shirt , with legs attached presumably , going back down the path that led through the grand herbaceous borders towards the house . |
6 | He passed through the green linoleumed passage and into the hall . |
7 | But although they lived as the only intellectual representatives of their own language in so small a place as Rapallo , they were not destined to decrease each other 's mental loneliness . |
8 | The charge of racism arose after the recent British National Party bye-election victory in East London . |
9 | Peeling from the back of a line-out he thundered through the Dark Blue ranks . |
10 | The number of kin living together rose during the early industrial period ( up to the middle of the nineteenth century ) and remained fairly constant thereafter . |
11 | It was broad daylight when I read this passage and the sunlight that radiated through the high plate-glass windows illuminated a scene of modernity and order . |
12 | Ruth hung back in the shadowy hallway and peered through the wide arched open front door , her heart beating so wildly she felt sick with it . |
13 | Each year Zuwaya moved between the northern coastal strip of semi-desert ( where they arrived in spring for the early pasture ) and the oases of the central Sahara . |
14 | Water oozed through the sodden cardboard inner soles , hastily fitted over the holes in my cheap plastic shoes as I stood in the rain outside the courtroom . |
15 | The footbridge section was narrow , but only a couple of feet to his left — within touching distance , in fact — was the steel mesh side of the railway bridge where monsters went battering across , drowning out conversation as their lights flickered through the big crossed support girders . |
16 | Managing the boat , he was in total command , and she admired him for the ease with which he wove between the countless busy craft , the pleasure boats , gondolas and the small and large ferries , his eyes constantly alert . |
17 | Labour members , though generally more committed to old-age pensions , free school meals and redistributive taxation than Liberals and considerably more so than Conservatives , gave greater primacy in their election addresses to unemployment and hours of work , which they regarded as the major social issues . |
18 | Beatrice was anxious not to follow what she regarded as the purposeless social round of the society wife and felt that the ‘ governing and guiding ’ work performed by women philanthropists was much less likely to ‘ unsex ’ women than academic work or the ‘ push and severity ’ demanded of a professional woman such as the hospital matron . |
19 | After a while I left the family room and wandered through the great central hall and on into the far side of the house , into Perkin 's workroom . |
20 | When she left in the evening , I wandered through the great empty building . |
21 | She headed for the outsize black car that was parked opposite . |
22 | Determined not to re-enter blind institution life , I headed for the nearby technical college who would n't have me either . |
23 | As they parked and headed for the open front door , a smiling woman in a dusky pink two-piece and with her silver hair caught back in a chignon appeared to welcome them . |
24 | Entire neighbourhoods headed for the unexpected one-way potlatch . |
25 | The Ceauşescus , of course , were underdogs who rose despite the new capitalist system — or at least as its enemies . |
26 | Only when the soldiers moved opposite the Palestinian front line at Galerie Semaan — and the familiar crackle of Beirut rifle fire began to make the troops nervous — did the Syrian column come to a halt as if scarcely able to take in its objectives . |
27 | Donna got to her feet , still keeping low , and moved towards the small round window close to the front door in the hall . |
28 | Ahead , a handful of broken Ionic columns rose against the pale blue sky . |
29 | Dunne belonged to ‘ the military section of Britain 's old upper class ’ , as J. B. Priestley [ q.v. ] , who based Time and the Conways ( 1937 ) on his interpretation of Dunne 's theory , was to recall ; ‘ he looked and behaved like the old regular officer type crossed with a mathematician and an engineer . ’ |
30 | In terror , I peered along the great wide lateral arms of the cathedral . |