Example sentences of "[adv prt] through [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Although Hinrich and Senta Medau are no longer with us , their work and inspiration live on through the second generation , while in this country the Medau Society celebrates its 35th Anniversary in 1987 .
2 The exhibition continues into twentieth-century painting with works of Futurism , the Cubist-Futurist Russians , American Cubism , Precisionism represented by Charles Demuth and Charles Sheeler and thence on through the various transformations that the art of this century has seen .
3 We wandered past the Delhi Gate and on through the crumbling streets of Old Delhi ; as we went , Pakeezah stared sadly around her .
4 Before that time , knowledge and wisdom were passed on through the spoken word , as they still are in much of the world .
5 Patronage did not die out with industrialization ; it lived on through the honorific offices of county clubs and national bodies .
6 THE pathetic objections voiced by the Lords to allowing peerages to pass on through the female line really rammed home to me how outmoded this institution is .
7 ‘ Where are we going ? ’ she asked , as the car moved smoothly down the road and then on through the small village just beyond .
8 The picture speaks for itself , on through the 29 generations .
9 He urged them on through the mounting waves until they too reached the Rebecca , and he was able to ram one hole , fill it with pitch , then another , and another , round the hull beneath the overhang of the bows , in a rain of missiles , with fire sizzling around him , and his fellow fighters hanging on , hoping for the moment when the timbers would be ablaze .
10 They walked on through the driving rain .
11 The Inspector pushed on through the unfamiliar undergrowth , ‘ 1965 to 1972 , Priest in charge , St James 's Malta ; 1973 to 1980 , Priest in charge , St George 's Monte Regia ; 1982 to 1987 , Vicar of St Ermyntrude Warnford Parva ; 1987 , Rector , St Benet Oldfield with St Nicholas Nether Oldfield . ’
12 Rupert Hall 's short history of the college guides us through the years leading up to this event , then on through the 20th century to recent times .
13 ‘ Do n't worry , ’ he said , skipping on through the amateur boxing and back around to the broadcast channels again .
14 He got in through a half-closed larder window .
15 Then , to me : ‘ We went to Orkney last summer , and she made me crawl in through a ghastly tunnel into some underground charnel-house .
16 ‘ I had help getting in here , ’ Hari said quickly , ‘ I did n't get in through a bolted door on my own now , did I ? ’
17 ‘ I tried the bell at the front , ’ Pete said as they went in through a whitewashed scullery .
18 The sunshine was pouring in through a high window on the right , warming a square of the dark red polished floor and making the rest of the room look gloomy by comparison .
19 Gooch played the shot of a weary man , completely foxed by a slower ball from Manoj Prabhakar that drifted in through a large gap between bat and pad .
20 But on the night of January 1st , thieves crept in through a back door and took £30,000 worth of family heirlooms , including two trophies won by the stud farm nearly a century ago :
21 He was disturbed when his 2 attackers crashed in through a back door .
22 The thieves , who broke in through a back door , also stole a 24in gold link chain , a gold bracelet and a JVC video recorder .
23 Jay Disley was spotted by the police looking in through a broken window and his accomplice Simon Brooklyn was found in the kitchen of the house in Berrybank Crescent .
24 ‘ Mind this patch , it 's slippery , ’ Weasel warned as he traversed a landing where snow had drifted in through a broken skylight .
25 She was n't one of these poor deprived kids who slipped in through an open window or an inadequately locked door and then did not know better than to steal a television or a video .
26 The Anti-Rex crawled down the wall of the Butcher Building and in through an open window .
27 Instead officers climbed in through an open window and arrested Mr Bellamy .
28 Jewellery worth £450 was taken after a thief got in through an open window .
29 It turned out to have come in through the curved zip which is unprotected by a weather flap .
30 yes , yes , that 's why it tells us in verse twenty four of Luke thirteen ex exert yourself vigorously to get in through the narrow door
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