Example sentences of "[to-vb] [adv prt] the [noun] [pers pn] " in BNC.
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1 | But Francis replied : ‘ With the squad I 've got , I 'm happy to carry on the way we are . |
2 | So we ca n't use the funds in our balance sheet , simply to carry on the way we are , we have to change . |
3 | There were no immediate changes , it went on from private enterprise , the changeover We were told at the time that we were just just to carry on the way we 'd been doing . |
4 | Right , we , we , we did actually draw , or we not draw , we , we adopted a constitution during the year and the officers that are erm elected are the Chair , the Secretary and the Treasurer , erm and other , together with other such officers , yeah to determine by general meeting , erm , so it 's really only those three , er and we have sometimes had Advice Chair if there 's only been one Chairman have n't we , one Chair person erm so I think people need to say if they do n't wish to carry on the jobs they 're doing and if anybody wishes to nominate anyone in a particular post then slip at the bottom of the minutes could be filled in and either brought to meeting or sent back to the Secretary . |
5 | he and he were like this in the water I had to go down the bank I grabbed hold of him in the middle of his back , just turfed him out . |
6 | and I 'm going to write down the answers they give me and get them to sign them because I have I have really been beaten about the head by this ! |
7 | It may help if you use a notebook to write down the point you want to make . |
8 | Mathers twisted his head to pull off the bite he 'd taken ; he chewed for a while . |
9 | On this last day I want to sum up the things we have discussed . |
10 | Having declared the new music to be — incomprehensible on the basis of traditional aesthetics ' , Nietzsche at once went on to sum up the task he saw before him : " the thing above all is to get beyond Lessing 's Laocoon " . |
11 | feeling as it were ready to come up the way you were swallowing it you could feel it . |
12 | But if he springs for the Savoy , he 's going to want to try out the stuff he saw in Swedish Au Pairs Get Raunchy . ’ |
13 | A basic principle is to try out the things you think you are most likely to enjoy and to incorporate them into your routine on a long-term basis . |
14 | But I find it more useful actually to write out the things I want you to actually do . |
15 | From about 1983 the courts started to rein back the development they had unleashed . |
16 | Previous experience of using visually stimulating material , encouragement to do so , interest in the task in hand , curiosity and enjoyment seem to play a part in the way that some pupils use even low levels of vision to help them to find out the things they are interested in . |
17 | Yeah , past experience to find out the level they 're at at the moment . |
18 | Since I started as an engineer , and have ended as a biologist , I am struck by the similarities between the two ways of thinking , although there is the difference that an engineer starts with a function to be performed , and designs a structure to perform it , whereas a biologist often starts with a structure , and has to work out the function it is performing . |
19 | This will enable you to work out the changes you need to make in your diet and plan your own personal ‘ diata ’ . |
20 | It does n't improve his nerves now to see me sitting on his carpet timing Casey 's phone rings with my stopwatch to work out the number he dialled . |
21 | His mind was still trying to work out the puzzle she had set him . |
22 | kilometres per hour to work out the time it takes we do four thousand divided by three er eight hundred and fifty . |
23 | Yet all this frankness was fundamentally an act : to fill the silence that she feared in others , to ward off the invisibility she feared in herself . |
24 | Howard is wearing a very pale grey suit , with a pale blue shirt and a white silk tie , to set off the suntan he has acquired in the country . |
25 | As soon as she stopped struggling and stood motionless he let her go and bent to pick up the shoes she 'd dropped . |
26 | Saturday morning , and once again a fair and breezy day , so fair that I decided to give myself a holiday from writing , and go straight after breakfast to pick up the supplies I would need for the weekend . |
27 | ‘ What are you doing up here anyway ? ’ he demanded , leaning over to pick up the towel he had left on the seat . |
28 | He bent to pick up the card he 'd been carrying then scowled at the deserted foyer . |
29 | Could my night-time visitor have called in here to pick up the key he had shown me , and left the back door open at the same time ? |
30 | She reached down to pick up the sweater she had thrown on to her own oilskins . |