Example sentences of "[vb infin] through the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 They do , paradoxically , thread through the dead experience of work a living culture , which is n't simply a reflex of defeat .
2 You know often they do n't stay through the whole meeting but if they 've got specific points to bring up you know th you know it 's flexible really you know sort of depending on what 's going on really .
3 Now , their lustre faded , they must plough through the qualifying slog to get there .
4 As a body corporate , a building society can only act through the human agency of its officers and employees .
5 For example , as a plagioclase-rich layer sediments , fast-settling olivine formed in the overlying layer can fall through the interfacial zone and the excess density flux can overturn the layer .
6 Before the dropping of the atomic bombs , the Americans had feared that the Russians would not honour their pledge to join the war against the Japanese , and it is believed that the Allied forces were held back in Europe , so that the Russian troops could advance through the eastern part of Europe into Czechoslovakia .
7 The under coat must not show through the outer coat .
8 In this case the librarian may choose to purchase or borrow through the interlending system , depending upon the work 's quality and the likelihood of its being requested and/or used again .
9 We now contemplate the onset of the ‘ third wave ’ which may flood through the main part of the 1990s .
10 The Prime Minister may have complained that under former management the poll tax was bounced through , but he will gladly ram through the new poll tax .
11 If the concentration of modifying oxide is sufficient , the threads of modifier will percolate through the whole structure defining routes that avoid the insulating silicate network .
12 If the plaintiffs fail to establish a breach of contract through the front door of s13(1) , they can not succeed through the back door of s14. ( p753 ) This explains the approach in Bartlett v Sidney Marcus [ 1965 ] 1 WLR 1013 which was a pre-1973 definition case .
13 You can work through the open learning material whether or not you are enrolled on the programme .
14 I sneaked a look at face , although I could scarcely see through the veiled curtain which had so mysteriously woven its way around my eyes .
15 The wash boiler is on in the kitchen so you can not see through the French window for steam .
16 An elderly woman had appeared out of the kitchen which Edwards could see through the half-opened door at the end of the small hallway .
17 Ruth saw she could n't last long ; her face had a blind look , as if she could no longer see through the dazzling fire .
18 ‘ I lived in America for a long time and I can see through the glossy image-making of his campaign , I think .
19 This is the most interesting way as you can then follow through the complete life-cycle of the butterfly .
20 I saw Dickie this morning and I said to him how do you let these bowlers follow through the other pitch ?
21 Er now some more practical and down to earth aspects er Michael director of development will run through the critical path analysis for the new factory extension .
22 The main theses/themes of the work : these will run through the whole book in varying forms and degrees .
23 It would n't fit through the back door . ’
24 Brockway had specifically rejected any proposal to reaffiliate to the Labour Party at the end of 1934 : " The decisive objection to this " , he wrote , " is that a Socialist can now only function through the Labour Party by giving up his Socialism " .
25 The middle diagram shows how objects would move through the visual field for pure rotations round the two horizontal axes , and the right-hand diagram shows , enlarged , the approximate region where the receptive fields shown in Figure 5 had been collected .
26 These will then develop through the usual plant successions into areas of organic sediment rather like the backswamps in the interior of the delta .
27 Whereas the subject of Marx 's early work should develop through the productive construction of the world , Simmel 's examples most often related to the potential provided by the exchange and consumption of goods not of one 's own production .
28 Students feel they will gain through the poor performance of others and suffer by imparting their own knowledge to fellow students .
29 A heavyweight machine to cut the hard rock would sink in the soft sections , and a lightweight machine could n't cut through the hard rock sections .
30 It is because such a historical social psychology would cut through the conventional distinction between pure and applied social psychology , and because it would not lay claim to universal psychological principles , that it would involve a more radical change in orientation that a universal anthropological social psychology .
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