Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] the deep [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Success in some new industries and London 's continuing world importance in finance during the ‘ upswing ’ from 1933 to 1966 , together with the deep interruption of the Second World War , largely disguised the gradually declining value of the UK 's old international and political role . |
2 | In ulcerative colitis most of the TNF α immunoreactivity was seen in the subepithelial macrophages , with comparatively less in the deep lamina preopria , while in Crohn 's disease immunoreactive cells were distributed evenly throughout the lamina propria . |
3 | The men paused in their tracks , locating the sound , and within seconds we were hurrying back to a place that we 'd passed where the sheer slope of the mountain was broken only by the deep rift of a water-course . |
4 | Tsu Ma had pushed for forward through the water until he was standing just below the deep lip of the bank . |
5 | It was like a wild , graceful leap in the air and they both disappeared momentarily into the deep water of the lake . |
6 | He stretched his long frame comfortably in the deep leather chair as he explained that the gentleman in question was his mother 's grandfather , a roistering old sea-dog by the name of Joshua Probert , more inclined to raising Cain than crops . |
7 | Lightning forked overhead , illuminating the camp like day , and thunder crashed deafeningly through the deep darkness that followed . |
8 | Opposite him , he noticed that Janet Roscoe had delved once more into the deep handbag , this time producing a very slim volume , whose title it was impossible for him not to see , and which he could have guessed in any case : CHAUCER , Tale of the Wyf of Bathe . |
9 | Some years previously , however , a long tunnel , North Cross-cut , was taken off ( along a fault ) from a point further along the Deep Level ( see Fig. 19a ) to try the Dry Gill Vein — at the intersection it was found to be a barren quartz string . |
10 | Nutty switched her attention once more to the deep end , where it seemed that Nails was giving Jazz a compulsory lesson in turns . |
11 | Beyond , the path was the same — empty in the darkening moonlight and leading gently downhill into the deep shadow of a grove of ilex trees . |
12 | Even as she observed this , it did just that , slithered off the nail which supported it and plunged headfirst into the deep blue of the mantelpiece . |
13 | Under his expert guidance we have used underwater television extensively in the deep water , and failed to reveal any rotting vegetation or tree trunks . |
14 | Christians were distressed because the age of revelation was over ( and they were acutely conscious of this with the passing of the apostolic generation , as is made clear not only by the speedy recognition in the second century that their writings were determinative for the Christian faith , but also by the deep sense of nostalgia to be found in the earliest of the sub-apostolic writers like Polycarp and Ignatius ) . |
15 | Yeah , you 're getting now into the deep chemical |
16 | Other additions to make the supplement obsolete come mainly from the deep south , where Geoff Hornby and Suzi Sammut have been cruising around on their Luxury Liner ( E3 5c ) , which is a variant on their own Crinoid Cruise . |
17 | Whirling like a miniature tornado past Lucenzo 's menacing bulk , she persuaded her legs to stop wobbling by sheer force of will and strode angrily over the deep snow to the nearest bus stop . |
18 | Certainly , Gunnar Myrdal 's great work The American Dilemma provides evidence that , even in the deep South , during the days of segregation , the expression of racism was not completely uninhibited . |
19 | Even in the deep trance state , no patient will do or say anything which he would not do or say when fully aware and awake . |
20 | In the conflict with Gnosticism Rome played a decisive role , and likewise in the deep division in Asia Minor created by the claims of the Montanist prophets to be the organs of the Holy Spirit 's direct utterances . |
21 | In Chapter 2 , I argued that the emancipatory conception of higher education — as I termed it — is to be found historically in the deep structure of the concept of higher education ( and I developed the idea in Chapter 8 , in discussing emancipation as the highest form of rationality ) . |
22 | Linear chains of oceanic volcanoes , such as the Hawaiian and Society Islands , that occur when lithospheric plates drift over a ‘ hotspot ’ , are now widely thought to be the surface manifestation of mantle plumes , columns of hot rock that rise buoyantly from the deep mantle . |