Example sentences of "[vb pp] through [prep] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It was remarkably brief , but encompassed a great deal and was consciously planned and carried through as an ecumenical Council , the first of its kind .
2 Here , everyone had been friendly , and the difference carried through to the whole club .
3 These sorts of books have such an excellent hardback sale which is not always carried through to the same extent with the paperback .
4 The Foreign Secretary stressed , however , that aid on its own can never ensure reform is successfully carried through in the two countries .
5 Here , we describe the range of activities commonly carried through by the Scotch Whisky companies before considering , in Section 3 , how we might measure the employment they support .
6 First built at the time of Edward I , it has been occupied through to the present day .
7 The wrenching cry at the start of the Finale claps a vice on the emotions that is sustained through to the ambivalent release provided by the Epilogue , and Barbirolli is one of the few conductors to prolong the agony of the climax by observing VW 's protracted emphasis on the grinding trombone and tube underpinning .
8 It 's as if my mind has suddenly broken through into a new area , a space , a vast capacity which I never dreamt I had .
9 Hewitt had only just broken through into the first team and gave a good account of himself in matches against Crewe and Chesterfield .
10 He wrote immediately to the SMG , cutting off all contact : ‘ I am not interested in agencies who politic and posture for no other reason than to promote themselves … secondly , as I am not presently able to place any trust in you , I must insist that any further matters you wish to raise are channelled through to a suitable agency , viz the local council or HCRC . ’
11 Darwinian evolutionary thinking influenced him too , and his work on society is shot through with an evolutionary perspective , from the primal horde , a notion he derived from Darwin , to complex technological societies .
12 The useful information in this book is shot through with the engaging assertion that the books are biographical and that when he journeyed to some of the scenes of Hornblower 's exploits the author was truly following in the steps of his hero .
13 The ban has been pushed through by the Labour group which regained control of the county council in May .
14 Nevertheless , adoption of the bill was only pushed through after an angry demonstration outside the Supreme Soviet building on Aug. 18 in protest at blatant delaying tactics by Gumbaridze .
15 The government accepted indicative bids for BTG and informed the consortia involved in the bidding which of them had got through to the second round at the end of January .
16 Callers sometimes misdial and think they have got through to the local barracks or Lingfield garage .
17 Erm I think bro broadly , certainly by the time you 've got through to the later spring th th there is y yes I mean i in a sense there are sort of three areas if you like but , but very broadly the areas which had not been taken over yet i is very much a slower process of consolidation and then you wait for the next rule .
18 So my outburst had got through to the big dog — he knew I was n't going to stand any more nonsense from him .
19 I do n't know who 's got through from the other games , but we 'll take anyone on really I think .
20 If just a single layer is used it will be stitched through to the outer shell of the bag at intervals and sometimes stitched right through to the lining on cheaper bags .
21 Althusser thus suggests that history can only be thought through as a permanent contradiction : it is a totality , but that totality is a decentred structure in dominance in which each history 's history is defined not through its identity with , or difference from , a general history but by being differentiated from every other history , on which it is necessarily also therefore dependent , in a kind of negative totalization .
22 ‘ The proposals have been fully thought through by the local education authority , the Anglican Diocese of Liverpool and Roman Catholic Archdiocese .
23 Ideas from the psychoanalytical school have been extremely influential , and can be seen to have filtered through into a wide range of theoretical models of depression .
24 In recent years the evidence for the health benefits of fibre , or ‘ roughage ’ as it used to be called , has grown so strong that it has filtered through from the medical journals and is now well known to the British and American public .
25 Then Wickham was invited through to a back room and a telephone .
26 Austrian Gerhard Berger was sixth in a Ferrari , also on his first outing after returning to the team , having stolen through on the penultimate lap .
27 This is pulled through from the tufted end , a technique particularly useful for vending machine parts and similar to that used for cleaning rifles .
28 But this passageway was cut through in the seventeenth century if not earlier .
29 For the bridge Encore have used rosewood , with the strings fixed through from the rear edge .
30 Charles kept remembering what Micky Banks had gone through at the same stage , and often , like his predecessor , was ready to throw in the towel and say it was impossible .
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