Example sentences of "of [noun] [verb] through a " in BNC.

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1 Andy : ‘ In the same series where we got ‘ Teethgrinder ’ from , there was this American girl who snorted so much cocaine in the ‘ 70s that now , when she breathes in deeply , it sounds like a gust of wind blowing through a haunted house in her head .
2 The applied maps were computer generated and then colour printed , using information from a number of databases processed through a Geographic Information System New computer methods were developed during the project to enable these various databases , which included digitised geological linework and mine plans , raster-scanned topography and computer-coded borehole and geotechnical data , to be used in this way .
3 At its best , singing can feel like a river of light flowing through a firm yet flexible channel .
4 A small trough , seemingly casually placed at the side of steps winding through a rock garden , suggest a pause — a place to contemplate the intricate display of alpines and other miniature plants .
5 ‘ Grey Day ’ is a perfect evocation of England going through a very bad patch .
6 In tracing characteristic source-specific sub-populations of sediment passing through a river system the closest possible spacing of sieves may be required .
7 Indeed , sound is perhaps best thought of as a wave , or series of waves , of stress passing through a substance at its natural speed .
8 Processing of stimuli goes through a sequence of phases .
9 Most governments in the old Eastern Bloc were concerned with social discipline , and they also stressed the importance of authority wielded through a strong state , but it would be wrong to see them as Conservative .
10 The best measure of average grain size , the mean is computed from sizes of particles spread through a range of percentile values .
11 In health terms , the car is responsible for 820 hours of life lost through a road traffic accident fatality , and 2,800 hours of life damaged by a road accident .
12 Still undecided , we breakfasted early and , having packed our walking gear into the Citroën ( though with up to 64 cubic feet of space accessed through a hatch that opens practically down to ankle level , packing is hardly the word ) , we drove off .
13 Still undecided , we breakfasted early and , having packed our walking gear into the Citroën ( though with up to 64 cubic feet of space accessed through a hatch that opens practically down to ankle level , packing is hardly the word ) , we drove off .
14 Poetry alone is worldwide and limitless ; and even through the mangling of translation , the images of beauty come through a hundred tongues unsullied .
15 The plane is like a flat piece of glass stuck through a jelly .
16 On the bank a line of children running through a field of clover were knee-deep in mist .
17 The general theory of relativity proposed by Einstein in 1915 imposed a new view of the space–time we inhabit : instead of matter moving through a passive space–time continuum the general theory of relativity ( GR ) asserts that the presence of matter should distort space–time .
18 All at once a single shaft of moonlight exploded through a high window and struck this disc , causing it to revolve .
19 Time- asymmetry thus implies that while the terrain was undergoing upheaval new types of animal arose through a feedback process , because they needed the land for further food , and because the waxing and waning ice-ages together with ( or as a result of ) the early breakup and reformation of the continents often had major and fatal consequences for marine and land faunas .
20 I waited in the corridor for our blanket and any message for Sister Casualty , and brooded on the baby 's chances of survival , how any mother could have made herself pack her own baby in a carrier-bag , and what kind of thoughts passed through a woman 's mind when she walked away after abandoning her baby in a telephone-box , or anywhere else .
21 This may necessitate a careful examination of customer needs through a survey conducted by the seller .
22 The highest price of £38,000 ( $58,140 ) was paid for ‘ On the Road ’ ( lot 16 , est. £25,000–35,000 ) , a depiction of horses led through a landscape by Sir Alfred Munnings .
23 They joined the stream of nomes hurrying through a crack in the crumbling corrugated iron and entered the vast , echoing chamber of the shed .
24 Yet still it appears impossible to discover the ownership of shares held through a minor Swiss bank which were used to help a second division British company build up stakes in several third division British companies .
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