Example sentences of "[to-vb] [pron] [adv prt] in [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I 'm actually , I 'm quite high on as theorist as well and I like to write everything out in full and I clear structures and if I go to training sessions and they 're all over the place , it 's such a in about five minutes and I have to say hang on a minute it might not be structured in the way that you like it but you can actually learn from it .
2 We had studied some navigation but now had the chance to try it out in more detail .
3 You obviously have to work it out in some way , but you seem able to arrive at the answer almost instantly .
4 In case there are any reading this who have still not seen the vision , allow me to spell it out in moral advice : If you attend zoos and circuses — find other entertainment ; if you are engaged in intensive ‘ livestock ’ farming — throw away the systems of close confinement ; if you are engaged in animal experimentation — find alternatives ; and if you still eat meat — give it up .
5 If you 're going to sum it up in one word ?
6 Since peasants who still possessed any seed reserves or livestock were excluded from relief , they were compelled to sell them off in some cases in order to survive .
7 Then he walked over and told me that a Corporal from the Foreign Legion recruiting office at Lille would come to pick me up in two hours ; until then I was free to go for a walk and get something to eat .
8 Yet to set ourselves up in such a manner contradicts our cherished notion of being part of the community . ’
9 ‘ When my name is cleared , ’ he said thoughtfully , ‘ I 'd like to set you up in better premises , supply you with as much leather as you need and get you an apprentice or two . ’
10 And , apparently , they 're going to set him up in some kind of arranged marriage . ’
11 er and and and nice to know that we want to establish contact and you may be aware that we 've had this plan , and , and what we want it to achieve is so and so , and we 'd like to set it up in this way .
12 It made us able to stand up on our own two feet , to sharpen us up in many respects .
13 I 've got a helicopter due to pick us up in half an hour , and the Citation 's on stand-by .
14 They turn up on church doorsteps in inner London hoping that the Church will be able to help them out in some way .
15 Bosch will be able to buy them out in 1996 for 20.4 times average earnings per share in the previous three years up to a maximum of 394p .
16 Erm , the facts are , and this is all in Trivers if you want to look up erm if you want to look it up in more detail , that males die more readily than females , from all causes that affect both sexes and some that even do n't and you 'd be astonished about , like for instance , you gather from John book on the myth of he heterosexual you 're not allowed to buy in this country , you have to import it from the U S.
17 He once locked two visiting American soldiers inside the cathedral one evening and promised to come to let them out in half an hour but forgot to come .
18 Disappointingly strawberries do not freeze so if you do not eat them at once you need to use them up in some other way .
19 Maxted sighed , and began to gather up his work from the floor , trying to put it back in some kind of sequence .
20 I 'm ashamed to put it down in these halting words .
21 Pennethorne 's version was that Hall had approved the scheme and directed him to draw it out in more detail , which he did , and submitted a set of drawings along with perspectives and an estimate to Hall in February 1856 .
22 Early March was scarcely the time of year for pleasure-sailing , but the young women insisted on going along ; and wrapping up warmly , they went down to the harbour and found fishermen to row them out in one of their high-prowed cobles .
23 I saw the way you had to fight him off in that first dance — the bastard 's hands were everywhere ! ’
24 The waiter , a cocky Italian who flicked his buttocks at her at the least opportunity , eyed her patronisingly and made attempts to chat her up in feeble English .
25 ‘ We 'll take a quick break for some tea and then we should be ready to run it up in another hour , ’ he briefs Captain Tuck-Brown , who has come across to check on progress before going home for the day .
26 This , diverted , now turned into a recital about every distant relative Neil Cochrane possessed , all of whom , apparently , had only one wish — to see him back in polite society again .
27 Where training is provided by humanities computing or computing science departments , there are pressures to dress it up in formal scientific terms so as to legitimize it in the eyes of the surrounding scientific community .
28 It coincided with the Suez Canal Crisis and Nasser 's decision to kick us out in 1956 .
29 It does n't bear thinking about , but I only hope I shall have learnt something from you in order to carry it on in some way or another . ’
30 ‘ You 've caused me and my friends a lot of trouble and we are going to pay you back in full .
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