Example sentences of "[pers pn] cut [adv prt] [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Hang on here , Jackie , while I cut up to the farm and ‘ phone . ’ |
2 | As soon as I was out of sight of the school I cut up through the cottages and round the back of the school on to the path to Bourani . |
3 | I cut off from the lane up towards Great Coum and the Megger Stones . |
4 | erm , you have , I have n't , and erm , there was a photograph that I cut out of the paper sometime before he abdicated , over the Prince of Wales at the races with Mrs Simpson . |
5 | Recessed ceiling lights ( eyeball spots and downlighters ) are fitted in circular holes which you cut out of the ceiling with a padsaw . |
6 | Lucy 's use for the place now over , she cut down by the stage and went out through the main part of the club . |
7 | Well if the Conservatives got in would you cut back the money allocated to recreation and would you cut back on the recreation services ? |
8 | We cut down to the riverbank before we reached them and walked along the water 's edge out of sight of the buildings above . |
9 | Then we cut back to the newsreader . |
10 | Hugh 's last scruples about seeing him cut out of the will were satisfied by writing him a personal letter of appeal . |
11 | Margrida 's absence would enable her to tell him that she wished him to cut down on the pretending — and on his caresses . |
12 | " It cuts down on the drama , no ? |
13 | Er turn left onto Road , to the railway line , and it cuts back along the railway line er which eventually comes out on the ring road . |
14 | ‘ No , Joe Steer was with me until we got to the corner of Bal Lane , then he cut through to the terraces . ’ |
15 | He cut up through the forest to where he 'd left the shotguns and followed the treeline round to the left until he hit a shallow ravine almost opposite the cabin . |
16 | After a dull opening 40 minutes Hagan took centre stage when he cut in from the right , chipped over Joe Tortolano , brought the ball down and then blasted beyond John Burridge . |
17 | But it 's the war , ’ she added without guile , and because the chief had taken a liking to the woman with the thick Liverpool accent who met her gaze without flinching , she told them to cut along to the galley ; if they were lucky they might just make standeasy . |