Example sentences of "[adv prt] in [adj] [noun] [pers pn] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Down in that dip we will be completely out of sight . |
2 | But the pickings could be huge : the audience for RAI 's recorded Italian Sunday football in the United States and Canada may be as high as 50 million , while down in Latin America they hunger for footage of Maradona at almost any price . |
3 | There again , I would say that top down in this country it is fast enough , and what shake there is certainly is not accompanied by any rattles or ‘ looseness ’ . |
4 | and they 're gon na be , they 'll be sort of down in this area you know |
5 | Down in this shop they 're one eighty nine for a packet of cigs . |
6 | So if you started off in complete darkness you rotate until you get complete darkness or the opposite . |
7 | If all this had to be summed up in one sentence I suppose it would have to be that Wittgenstein 's treatment of the ‘ Other Minds ’ problem is an extended illustration of a point in philosophical logic : namely , that the meaningfulness of some of the things we say is dependent on contingent facts of nature — such as that the Earth revolves on its axis , and that we moan with pain and react as we do to others who moan . |
8 | It 's being cooped up in this place I know , but her brain is just … ’ |
9 | Although curtains are sometimes made up in this fabric it is not always satisfactory as it can be rather stiff . |
10 | And there were patterns up in this store you see . |
11 | If I am daft enough to tackle up in those conditions I usually go to sleep and hope I wake up to a change for the better . |
12 | Y y you need n't lock your door up in those days you could leave your door open , and they 'd come and knock on your door and anybody in and I , I do n't think we ever had a key to our front door , but er no they were very friendly and there used to be an old midwife , Mrs her name was the , she used to charge half a crown for a birth . |
13 | But you had a bit of flare up A You flared up in last time you had came off it , did n't you ? |
14 | And you could already write up in red pen you sort it out instead of arguing about trying to do it . |
15 | I was , I was n't meaning you to go up in single numbers I was meaning , go up in hundreds . |
16 | Early on in both editions he writes , convincingly enough , of those who are unable to predict what will happen even when presented with all the necessary facts . |
17 | Later on in this chapter you will see how it has helped specific people in their lives , but first I would like to show how the technique can help some of the more common ailments that many people suffer today . |
18 | When she comes out in nice clothes I say get them for modelling ? |
19 | If you can get your book out in reasonable time I can see it being a real winner , and position-wise it wo n't do you any harm , that 's for sure . |
20 | Thi this is something which has come out in several places I do n't know whether the members noted it , erm the er it also touches on , on , on what my colleague said earlier and the item in paragraph V er the assumption of the demand remain much as it is , heavily towards the South East particularly Gatwick . |
21 | But they worked out in three years she 's put on seven stone because she eats . |
22 | This comes out in this page we 'll have a look at it in more detail in a minute . |
23 | When the clocks go back in late October it will be dark by five o'clock in the afternoon . |
24 | Back in Saxon times they were used as diuretics and were just one of dozens of herbs , plants and berries taken for medical purposes . |
25 | ‘ I do trust George completely ’ Annette went on ‘ I just have to with his work and so much he ca n't tell me but when he come back in that state I just could n't help … |
26 | well you sit there then , I 'll come back in two minutes I , I ca n't hear what Richard and James are doing |
27 | Back in civilian life he was foreman for a Darlington decorating firm , Jack Stead , and the couple moved into the town 's Rockingham Street . |
28 | Back in civvy street he landed a job at the Strand Cornerhouse in London ; from there a number of jobs with skilled confectioners allowed him to accumulate the experience needed to go it alone . |
29 | It is easy to slide tiles around and find they are back in some position they were in before . |
30 | Back in those hours I had remained a long time outside the door of North One , being filled by a sorrow so complete it overflowed , and I covered my ears not to hear any more . |