Example sentences of "[noun pl] [verb] through [prep] the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The town was grey and empty in the dull afternoon light ; cars swished through on the road going north , some with their headlights on , making everything else seem even dimmer .
2 A door opened and a light so bright and sudden it hurt their eyes spilled through from the back .
3 Tonight Middlesbrough stages the heats of the February Trainers ' Stakes , with the winners going through to the final on Saturday night .
4 He 's letting all sorts go through at the moment .
5 A raised wooden runway , carpeted with the pin-sharp points of six-inch nails hammered through from the bottom , ran out 50ft and ended in a bed of nails laid on the grass .
6 THE SHARE price of Lincat Group , maker of commercial catering equipment , is getting a boost after being toppled from its perch of 175p this summer when news of continuing problems at three subsidiaries filtered through to the City .
7 In reality one feeds the other ; the store of ideas filter through to the bespoke work while the insights gained by designing work for specific needs provide an overview of market needs .
8 Lowden bridges are unusual in two respects : the saddles are split into two sections for optimum intonation on wound and unwound strings , and the strings mount through from the back of the bridge rather than via the old bridge-pin method , which would mean a longer string-changing time .
9 And the bridge , with the strings going through to the back of the body ?
10 This can perhaps be interpreted as either a sign of policy changes feeding through into the yield curve or as a change in exchange rate expectations .
11 After the first round 8 teams went through to the final comprising 5 AIB Bank teams from Bank Place Ennis , Nenagh , Bindon St. , Ennis , 63 O'Connell St. , Limerick and Charlesville , B/I 94 O'Connell St. , Limerick and Ulster Bank O'Connell St. Limerick .
12 The Rokermen go through to the quarter-final for the first time since 1976 and a delighted caretaker manager Malcolm Crosby said : ‘ I am proud of the players .
13 Sucralose is one of the few products to come out of the Reading research labs that T&L felt it had the resources to develop through to the market .
14 For many people life today is such a bustling affair with so many things to get through in the day that it is not difficult to forget to be aware of what is around us .
15 In turn , the employment income generated by Scotch Whisky companies and their suppliers feeds through into the economy , supporting further jobs .
16 According to the Tass news agency , 37 trains got through over the weekend , partly as a result of ‘ serious measures ’ by the authorities .
17 Joint Chief Executive Roger Vaughan said : ‘ Our orders run through to the end of 1994 .
18 From the machining room the sails go through to the packaging department where they are folded , inserted in sail bags and sent either to the despatch department or put into stock .
19 The enemy was the more usual butt of filmmakers ' criticism , particularly in comedies which showed warm-hearted , slightly muddled Englishmen winning through against the demon aggressors .
20 During the 1970s and 1980s , therefore , Britain 's coalfields differed significantly in the degree of militancy of the NUM members , and those differences carried through into the conduct of the 1984–5 dispute .
21 Inside is a plastic platform which is perforated to allow liquids to seep through to the tank in the bottom .
22 That raises the question of whether or not that gives him the sort of ‘ job security ’ necessary to experiment with the new players coming through in the hope of building a side capable of beating All Blacks , Wallabies and Springboks .
23 Any investigation , such as a court would be obliged , in this type of case , to undertake , into the propriety of the internal procedures gone through in the course of passing a Bill would conflict with the modus vivendi in which Parliament and the courts had tacitly acquiesced since the celebrated Hansard litigation of the 1840s .
24 It used not to matter , because they dredged a deep-water channel from Emmerton to here , to let the ships get through to the port .
25 This is the process that programmers go through at the beginning of a job to understand existing code .
26 The Roker men go through to the Quarter-Final for the first time since 1976 .
27 Large numbers of waders pass through in the autumn including curlew , sandpiper and ruff .
28 The two women went through into the sickroom , where Mrs Richards was dozing in her chair , the gentle breeze stirring her wispy white hair .
29 Whether enough other Labour hopefuls win through in the ring of nondescript suburban and outer-London seats may ultimately depend on whether voters are more impressed by Labour 's dismal record in the city , or by its attractive and well-packaged promises .
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