Example sentences of "[vb infin] [adv prt] [prep] a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 He has to decide whether he should stay on pending a full trial of the bitter dispute between the two men , who stood side-by-side as saviours of the financially troubled club in 1991 .
2 Yes , I think I shall stay on for a few days here . ’
3 On the return , you can stay on for a few nights in Copenhagen for just £39 per person per night .
4 Most will stay on for an extra year at school or go into some form of further training .
5 Sheena Falconer , senior lecturer in textiles , has been told by the principal , Dr David Kennedy , that there is room for only one textile lecturer , but that she could stay on as an ordinary lecturer — the post held by her sister , Barbara Diack .
6 But he could cash in with a lucrative return against the 24-year-old German early next year .
7 If the small company audit is abolished , the reason for being authorised will disappear along with a substantial part of their earning capacity which they do not believe they can recoup through selling other services .
8 You want to be very careful er , Mr Chairman , how we put out erm , information , I mean , let's face it , you know , you start sort of raising a lot of hairs if you 're not careful and if , if , even if it 's totally irrelevant people will latch on to a particular com comment and make it their own .
9 If she went out into the rue du Bateau her suspicions might latch on to an innocent person coming from one of the other flats .
10 While I agree that worm watching will probably never catch on as a mass pursuit , something well known here in Cornwall is to observe seagulls tap dancing on the lawn after rain .
11 Back then , they did n't catch on in a big way . ’
12 Russell sees good opportunities in synthetic leather clothing , particularly if Morton can tie in with a European designer .
13 Just For the Record will tie in with a nationwide tour of the same name , and will be promoted ( including signing sessions ) by band members Francis Rossi and Rick Parfitt .
14 Just as a human baby may draw comfort from sucking a dummy , so occasionally a baby elephant will sidle up to a young female and suck her milkless nipple .
15 I thought I might catch up on a few chores instead .
16 The worlds they encompass read end to end do n't add up or line up along a single straight trajectory .
17 A host of current Irish League stars who came through the ranks will line up in a special BB challenge match .
18 I was to do the counting — up to a hundred ( I could n't count up to a hundred , I had to do it in tens ) and when I opened my eyes he 'd have disappeared .
19 ‘ It 's called feminism , ’ said Henry , ‘ and I hope you never get it , because it is absolutely awful and it makes you swell up to an enormous size and when you have it really badly you go round bonking men on the head and blaming them for everything .
20 Large particles will fall out within a few hundred kilometres of the detonation site ( the local fallout ) while smaller particles and gaseous radionuclides injected into the troposphere may be transported around the earth in the same hemisphere and between hemispheres by , for example , the East African low-level jet stream ( Findlater , 1974 ) , to be deposited hundreds or even many thousands of kilometres away ( the tropospheric fallout ) .
21 So all them hassles what you 're gon na get in the future when they they 're gon na fall out in a few years time .
22 But it has to be something good , or it will just fizzle out like a damp squib and you 'll feel worse than ever . ’
23 Whilst I stand to be corrected , it may well have been this greasy property which made the finish dry out with a khaki tone .
24 How could clothes not dry out on a warm sunny day ?
25 The rains may disappear as suddenly as they arrived ; the pond may dry out within a few days , and so the whole cycle of breeding activity must be completed in the shortest possible time .
26 If all goes according to plan the enemy will fall back into a defensive position to the west of the area , around an airfield .
27 Curiously enough , it appears that there is no question at all which fits the adjective of a sentence like ( 59 ) closely , so that one must fall back on a metalinguistic one such as ( 60 ) : ( 59 ) the sharks remain dangerous ( 60 ) what did you say about the sharks ? 5.7 Since the property of the postverbal is one which the speaker deliberately chooses to clothe in the guise of an adjective rather than an adverb , it must , as we have already remarked , be one which is capable of being ascribed to the referential locus of the subject phrase .
28 Pupils can often fall back on a circular argument such as : Why is the relationship linear ?
29 Rather than fall back on an increased emphasis upon managerialism based upon hierarchy and control , the Education Reform Acts should be regarded as an opportunity to review , not just in a coping way but in a maximising way , the management structures and processes of our schools .
30 In the process we may fall back on an idealized view of our own society , or take our cue from generalized impressions of ‘ Western ’ experience .
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