Example sentences of "[vb infin] [adv] far [conj] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 When Lothar himself crossed the Meuse , probably late in September , and announced that he would advance as far as the Seine , Charles 's support in Francia collapsed .
2 ‘ In the day , ’ said Barbara Coleman , ‘ I can see as far as the Esterel
3 I could not even see as far as the mouth of the burn .
4 It would n't exist as far as the programmer was concerned .
5 ( 4 ) The general rule does not apply so far as a provision of the consolidating Acts gives effect to an amendment ( in pursuance of a recommendation of the Law Commission and , in some cases , the Scottish Law Commission ) .
6 Where a listed company promotes an on-market " buy-in " of its shares , where the shareholders usually sell to an intermediary and the intermediary sells back to the company , the capital gains tax rules , rather than the ACT/distribution regime , will also apply as far as the vendor shareholders are concerned .
7 Predictably , she was not sympathetic to the boisterous ways of a young teenager , though she did not go so far as a Mrs Dudley who complained to Bloomsbury House that one of her fifteen-year-old lodgers , Willy , had ‘ broken the beading on a wardrobe and had also broken a chair ’ , offences which most parents of healthy teenagers would have accepted as part of growing up .
8 ‘ We 'll go as far as the village , ’ Sharpe said .
9 And you could only go as far as the money would go , could n't you ?
10 The indecent assaults did not go as far as the rapes but were ‘ equally repulsive ’ .
11 Certainly , it is important to study bureaucracies as institutions in their own right , even if we would not go as far as the poet Alexander Pope who wrote :
12 That 's right , but it does n't go as far as the Glen ,
13 The party could only go as far as the unions would allow and their influence was apparent at all levels .
14 John d'Ancona , who has been OSO 's director-general for 12 years , doubts if it will go as far as the creation of a series of OSO clones operating under the DTI umbrella to deal with specific industrial sectors .
15 In her affidavit Miss Heal set out , pursuant to the provisions of article 8 ( f ) of the Convention , the circumstances which she said would obtain so far as the mother is concerned if she and the child were to be returned to Ontario .
16 Look , if you do n't mind a bit of running you could just come as far as the Tube with me and we could continue this conversation on the way .
17 " Wo n't you come as far as the boat ? "
18 Could only get as far as the kitchen .
19 D' you think you can get as far as The Angel at Lacock ?
20 Whether we in this country could ever get as far as the Americans have done , remains to be seen .
21 The form is all you have in the initial stages , and if you do n't erm fill it out sensibly then you do n't get as far as the interview , when of course your individual personality can start to come through .
22 They did n't even get as far as the bedroom , one of the soft rugs strewn over the carpeting in her lounge serving as their bed of reunion , Maria still partly and Luke almost fully clothed as they subsided on to its subtly glowing colours .
23 Someone will reach for a tin of fish-paste only to be brought up short by another member of the party reminding them that fish-paste is unclean , while someone else may get as far as the checkout with a year 's supply of baked beans , when , across the crowded shelves of the supermarket , comes a voice reminding them of the danger they are facing .
24 Your leading hand is used to perform a reverse punch , but it does n't travel as far as a refereeing panel would like .
25 Some swim into the Baltic , others pass through the Straits of Gibraltar into the Mediterranean and may even travel as far as the Black Sea .
26 A recent claim by an accident and emergency consultant in Sheffield that children , and even adults , could regrow their finger tips , providing that the injury did not extend as far as the terminal or end joint , was greeted with considerable scepticism by the medical profession .
27 ‘ The disturbed weather will continue as far as the eye can see , ’ said Philip .
28 Gentlemen may venture as far as the gun room , but the door at the end of the housekeeper 's corridor prevents an encounter with any but upper servants of their own sex .
  Next page