Example sentences of "[vb -s] carry [adv prt] the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 She has to carry up the children , her shopping and any other goods coming into the household .
2 His widow , Mrs Mercy Rimer , has carried on the tradition these past few years , but this season will be her last .
3 They also failed to take him seriously , and made him angry , but he has carried on the struggle .
4 They will be able to challenge the charges of a solicitor executor who has carried out the administration of the estate , by applying for a Remuneration Certificate from the Law Society .
5 ‘ Its actual value is impossible to know , ’ said Mr Peter Freebody , whose yard at Hurley , near Henley , has carried out the project .
6 During my discussions with President Yeltsin , he explicitly accepted the disproportion between the British nuclear deterrent , Trident , and the nuclear capacity that will be available to the Soviet Union even after it has carried out the reductions to which it has committed itself , and which will take a decade or more to implement .
7 The Computer Centre has carried out the programming work for all of the systems described above .
8 He says that an enforcement notice has been issued , if the firm fails to carry out the work the County Council will do it and then bill them .
9 He says that an enforcement notice has been issued , if the firm fails to carry out the work the County Council will do it and then bill them .
10 He says that an enforcement notice has been issued , if the firm fails to carry out the work the County Council will do it and then bill them .
11 He says that an enforcement notice has been issued , if the firm fails to carry out the work the County Council will do it and then bill them .
12 After Mrs Wordingham 's death later in 1989 , Mr Wordingham applied to the High Court for rectification of the will under s 20(1) ( a ) of the Administration of Justice Act 1982 , which states that ‘ if the court is satisfied that a will is so expressed that it fails to carry out the testator 's intentions , in consequence — ( a ) of a clerical error … it may order that the will shall be rectified so as to carry out his intentions … ‘ .
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