Example sentences of "[vb -s] [adv prt] in the [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Yes , I think for a lot of people that 's true and I do n't denigrate that because I think a lot of good work goes on in the Women 's Institute , but what we are particularly interested in is in the professional craftsman , the craftsman who has trained for a number of year to produce extremely good work , and what we try to do is to make that work more available to the public in a number of ways .
2 Exploring Hidden Processes : what goes on in the heads of pupils doing simple addition calculations ?
3 G. observed that although holidays mean a shut-down in industrial activity , they can lead to plenty of pollutions because of the cleaning that goes on in the factories .
4 Ted , 51 — now trained in law and first aid — said : ‘ As a cleaner I 've had an insight into what goes on in the cells . ’
5 Classroom infrastructure tends to appear similar in different societies ; what is most various is the bureaucratic superstructure , which attempts to translate rhetoric into regulations and routine procedures for monitoring and controlling what goes on in the classrooms .
6 But you were telling me that there 's a lot of research that goes on in the universities .
7 Although the scheme seemed to be quietly dropped after the outcry about separating sheep from goats , in essence it lingers on in the policies of the Universities Funding Council ( UFC ) .
8 History lives on in the towns of Framlingham and Orford each with its own splendid medieval castle .
9 Koresh lives on in the hearts of such Branch Davidians as survived .
10 But it lives on in the poems we wrote together , and in the poems I wrote myself in Salamanca and Bath .
11 In front of me , the noble tradition lives on in the hands of a middle-aged commuter who , peering intently into his 101 Puzzles and Games for Boys , is joining up the dots incorrectly .
12 The union , he says , ‘ is an idea that lives on in the minds of our workers and their children ’ .
13 Our physical characteristics are handed on through the genes but the far more important part of us , the mental , lives on in the minds and eventually in the memory of the human race .
14 This convention , so standard in the comedies that it escapes notice ( especially in modern theatre-productions , where it is very rare to be able to hear any difference between prose and verse ) , stands out in the tragedies , where the clown 's reduction of the medium imposes an often uneasy mood of relaxation or verbal indulgence , outside the time of the tragic action , frustrating its rhythm .
15 I mean , what we know about what goes off in the courts , i is is entirely dependent on which particular reporter happens to be reporting .
16 St Helens ' new county champion Greg Helsby leads off in the singles and Raife Hutt of Southport & Ainsdale is back in the side .
17 Unfortunately , much of the opium produced by the plants ends up in the bloodstreams of drug addicts .
18 My tongue hangs up in the leaves
19 he 's got er , it 's like a bank that goes up in the fields
20 Now , if any of you get terribly tense at the back of shoulders which we all seem to do nowadays , if you come for just a back and shoulder massage , we actually work on the back of the neck and along the shoulders using massage movements which helps to relax you , which helps to actually break down the lactic acid that builds up in the muscles that causes you pain .
21 You know never gets up in the mornings ?
22 On Saturdays , during July and August , a discotheque opens up in the evenings .
23 There seems to be some poetry rattling about in there , rather as air rattles about in the bowels , but to get it out with a proper report — that 's the trick !
24 Like her neighbours , she never goes out in the evenings , and rarely ventures off the estate which is on the edge of town .
25 ‘ He very rarely goes out in the evenings . ’
26 ‘ Aye , me and one of my mates have been going round the Forestry Commission tracks up in the hills , goin' round at fifty , skiddin' all over the place like a speedway . ’
27 The debate over Matthew Maynard 's appointment as vice-captain of Glamorgan rumbles on in the pubs along the banks for the Taff , Hugh Morris , who was overlooked , remains tactfully silent .
28 This is why they do not , if they can possibly avoid it , pay the taxes the state can legitimately call for , obey the signs it reasonably puts up in the streets , and so on .
29 ( He leaps up in the air and comes down in the 'splits " position .
30 I hope this comes through in the recordings .
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