Example sentences of "and [vb infin] [adv prt] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Very kindly , Carole and Ben Meadows invited them to come and stay over the weekend .
2 Now the uncertainty has been lifted , hundreds of hospitals will seek self-governing status while more family doctors are expected to opt for their own budgets — although Mr Major reaffirmed yesterday that he would continue to cherish and build up the NHS .
3 Around a quarter of the managers were unemployed , he said , and the parents of the boys would have to try and make up the increase .
4 The artist would reproduce that grid onto a studio canvas in a proportionately larger scale , using it as a sequence of reference points by which to plot and paint up the landscape configuration exactly to the Design drawing .
5 And we all used to climb up and fall over the top anyway .
6 Example 2:6 Right of way : unlimited times and vehicles The right in common with the landlord and all others having the like right to pass and repass ( but not to park or except in emergency to stop ) with or without vehicles at all times and for all purposes connected with the use of the demised property ( but not otherwise ) over the road coloured on the attached plan Example 2:7 Right of way : limited times and vehicles ; right to load , etc The right in common with the landlord and all others having the like right to pass and repass on foot and with vehicles not exceeding … feet in length or … tonnes ( unladen weight ) at any time between 6 am on Monday and 8 pm on Friday in each week ( except public holidays ) for all purposes connected with the use of the demised property ( but not otherwise ) over the road coloured on the attached plan and to park any such vehicle for such period as may be reasonable for the purpose only of loading or unloading it Example 2:8 Right of way : right to load etc in loading bay The right at all times with or without vehicles to pass and repass over the road leading from to the demised property ( but not to halt or park any vehicle thereon except in case of emergency ) for all purposes connected with the use of the demised property and the right for the same purposes to use the loading bay coloured on the attached plan for loading and unloading any such vehicle ( b ) Stairs and passages In a lease of property on an upper floor of a building there will be implied an easement of necessity to use a staircase that is its sole means of access ( Altmann v Boatman ( 1963 ) 186 EG 109 ) .
7 Later on in the day I wander up to Low Force with no boat and no-one except my girlfriend and the fish trying to swim and jump up the fall for company .
8 Tranmere Rovers , worried by the missing thousands at Prenton Park , became the first club to react with their recent cut-price campaign to try and win back the fans .
9 Expecting that he would now let her go and retreat down the ladder , she was startled when his large hands gripped her thighs and continued to guide her until she was standing two steps above him .
10 The council has set up a special investigation team to try and track down the copiers .
11 I think to try and break down the barriers that some of the West Indian children have against teachers and academic things …
12 In a warm blizzard of drowsiness he watches the snow sud and curdle over the roofs and spires of the New Town , mounting up the slope of Old Odborough , up the hill of the Main Street , till it reaches Mount Pleasant .
13 Police said 65-year-old James McQuaker left his house in Wellbeck Avenue at about 9pm to close and lock up the Haughton Road service station before returning home twenty minutes later with cash and credit vouchers .
14 On many occasions the interpolation splits the syntax of the spoken words in ways that require the reader not only to register the speaker but to store and carry over the syntax and sense of the quoted words :
15 As Derek Hatton , Deputy Leader of Liverpool City Council put it , ‘ We 'd want to make sure that … those who are employed to manage and carry out the policies which we decide are those who are in general sympathy with those policies ’ ( Gyford , 1985b , p. 58 ) .
16 Lazy bitch , she was : lying on this couch day after day feeling too bad to move ; but she could go upstairs and carry out the duties of a wife whenever the fancy took her .
17 If money is a problem , we in ‘ Spokes ’ have a group of experienced path-building volunteers , who could organise and carry out the work .
18 3.2 The Landlord shall procure that as soon as in the opinion of the Architect the Works on the Premises are sufficiently advanced to enable the Tenant to commence and carry out the Tenant 's Works the Architect shall give notice to the Tenant to that effect
19 The team is liaising with manufacturers on the design and development of CFC-free refrigeration equipment and identifying the skills needed to evaluate and carry out the conversions .
20 It is a product of organised human life , and it is primarily their responsibility to start and watch over the process .
21 ‘ You know , the only ambition she ever had for me was to marry well and bring up the colour of the family . ’
22 anybody can camouflage and bring up the colouring you know .
23 The northern part is also worth visiting though , and there are several excellent areas to rest and soak up the sun and the atmosphere .
24 But everyone enjoyed the opportunity to relax , socialise and soak up the sun .
25 ‘ It 'll just collapse and give up the ghost somewhere in France .
26 The school was closed on Wednesday as well so people had time to dry out and clear up the mess that the water had made .
27 The SWWA had opened the hydrants at night to try and clear out the system before the town woke up .
28 ‘ I 'd better go and look over the script before dinner , ’ she told him without meeting his eyes .
29 The bloke behind the counter said , look , I 've just got to go and look up the year of manufacture , I 'll be back in a couple of minutes .
30 The Courtaulds man explained : ‘ Hashing serves the needs for expatriate communities to relax and work off the frustrations of life in a foreign land . ’
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