Example sentences of "and [adv] [verb] [adv] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 Manchester United and Norwich were also interested in the 21-year-old Malmo defender , a big hit in the European Championship finals and widely admired ever since .
2 Manchester United and Norwich were also interested in the 21-year-old Malmo defender , a big hit in the European Championship finals and widely admired ever since .
3 These difficulties , it is argued , although in part the result of the marginalization of the arts in British education at national level , are also caused by the failure of arts educators to come to terms with the reasonable expectations of those charged with administering INSET at local level and thereby exploit more effectively the support for the arts of those charged with administering education .
4 He then moves to the East to Herbert and Clara 's and works for Clarriher , as a clerk , and eventually does quite well for himself .
5 Julian never paid back the money , even though he started up in business again and eventually did all right for himself .
6 Yet , a large number go on and eventually do reasonably well academically , the implication being that sporting involvement may not be so detrimental to education as it might appear .
7 Perhaps their hippocampal cognitive mapping capacity is simply desperately starved of use in a lab , and so responds almost greedily to the novel inputs offered by neurophysiological stimulation of input paths .
8 If a number of employees insist on cash payment , an employer can not simply scrap his old cash-payment system , and so gains far less from instituting bank payment than if he can simply switch to bank payment as the general rule .
9 Telford 's canals took a much more direct course than Brindley 's , and so involved much more dramatic engineering , of which a splendid example is the bridge over the deep cutting near Tyrley , on the Shropshire Union Canal .
10 It excludes the interpretation that the door shut of its own accord , and so leads more explicitly to the conclusion that the door was shut by the shopman .
11 In future , the SIB is expected to regulate firms directly only on a ‘ last-resort basis ’ , and so to focus almost entirely on its primary role as a regulator of regulators .
12 This is also an area where the LEA could assist a school in offering its services as a ‘ critical friend ’ , able to stand back and perhaps judge more objectively than those working in the school itself .
13 As the Queen had matured , and perhaps become more politically aware , so on the Teheran rumour mill it was reliably asserted that there was a rift between her and the Shah .
14 It is now possible , however , to see the few remains of this enigma more clearly , and perhaps to appreciate more easily the impressive scale of the machinery that once was there .
15 More are likely to be ill informed , to take little interest in politics , and perhaps to give rather less thought to the casting of a vote than to the marking of a pools coupon .
16 If there are too few to meet emergency treatment needs , there will be intolerable pressure on families and community services because people will be admitted only as a desperate last resort , treated rapidly and perhaps discharged too early .
17 He has been a member of Dinsdale Golf Club for seven years and only played there about ten times and that is something else he hopes to expand on , he says .
18 He was now quiet , dignified , and obviously hurting badly inside .
19 He was initially given a senior position at the Command Centre in the United Nations but when the head of the European operation died in a car crash … which was subsequently proved to have been an accident and not sabotage as originally thought …
20 We had a remarkable woman for a nurse or " Mother 's help " as she was called even in those days , because Mother liked bringing up her own children and was always around , with the nursery the centre of the house , and not tucked away upstairs .
21 All this did , of course , cost money , but if you 've had even a comparatively small amount of that and then lost it , you do tend to realize how transient the whole thing is and not worry so much about getting it back again .
22 At other times the loop amounts to going round in circles and not getting anywhere fast .
23 I was surprised because she 'd been throwing herself at him all day and not getting anywhere much . ’
24 The emphasis of the training was always on the practical side , helping the students to do things for themselves , and not to rely too heavily on imported materials .
25 But I knew Elsie would start at the top and not go very far down .
26 Meanwhile Hillary 's reward for standing by her man and not forging too far ahead with her own individual approach will be immense — a degree of personal power that no American woman has ever savoured before .
27 Nothing she said , just a way she has of slightly turning and doing something else and not replying as quickly as she might .
28 ‘ Whenever I used to feel on top of the world , I would just open my mouth and sing , and not care too much about what came out , ’ remembered Kylie .
29 Just prior to this I was under a great deal of pressure to complete a computer program , and went in to work while I was suffering from the flu and not sleeping very well .
30 I 'd rather him not travel it , I 'd rather him stop here on Sunday and not come home so that he 's got ample rest , cos he 's not getting it I , I , I du n no , I , I might be wrong , but he moans at me cos I knock me
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