Example sentences of "[to-vb] through [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Admittedly , one has to stoop down to smell a low shrub , but that is not such a problem for most of us as it is to struggle through to the middle of a bed .
2 Part of the wall , as you can see , is to be knocked down to allow the drive to pass through to the garages .
3 She unlocked her eyes from his and turned to pass through to the apartment .
4 Around the lid a number of small holes can be drilled for the water to pass through into the jar .
5 News concerning the development in style took a little time to percolate through to the country ; a sculptor carving a resurrection scene on a 1707 headstone outside the south door of Uffington church , Oxfordshire , continues to depict the gable-lidded coffin .
6 The rocks or stones at the pool boundary retain the bog-garden soil yet allow water to percolate through from the pool .
7 There are also early signs that the increased cost of imports resulting from the devaluation of sterling last September is beginning to work through to the shops .
8 Members of the committee will see that savings continue to come through on the school meals service and this is to a very considerable extent , the result that the ethos of the previous Conversative administration which ran a tight ship and positively encourage deficiency .
9 Besides , sample results are not instantly available , but take at least two or three weeks , sometimes longer , to come through from the agency 's laboratories .
10 ‘ With the Government slowly clamping down on all media coverage , unless I moved fast any chance of filming within South Africa would be gone and I did want the accuracy and flavour of the country itself to come through in the film . ’
11 But you 've raised a very valid point and it 's one that we need to see through to the end .
12 Er if , if there is a sufficient er indication in these words an indication , a pointer as I say , if there 's a transparency in these words which enables us to see through to the truth then our formulation of it does n't matter all that much .
13 They were about to go through to the back-kitchen when the door behind the bar opened , and Connor came out with a large , pink-faced gentleman .
14 He was in the side which beat Norfolk by just one run in the semi-final to go through to the Lord 's final on Aug 26 .
15 ‘ If you 'd like to go through to the conservatory , I 'll bring you breakfast in just a minute . ’
16 Now I , they could , erm one thing that I found b b b b picked up from doing my own reading and studying was that it 's always good to go through with the customer step by step which is to a certain extent what we do do
17 I did not like the prospect of playing in front of all these people who were all older than me and would see my violin playing from a critical view , but I had come this far , and it would be stupid not to go through with the audition .
18 Then the buyer lost money because of the Gulf crisis , and the price of land was falling so he chose not to go through with the contract .
19 But Teesside Crown Court was told both brothers changed their minds and tried to persuade McEvoy not to go through with the burglary .
20 Their parents spent three years contemplating whether or not to go through with the separation , which was at first thought impossible because of the degree to which the girls were joined .
21 ‘ If I were Newley , I 'd want to know for certain , even if I intended to go through with the deal . ’
22 He joked : ‘ I would rather just do the run — but I 'm told I 've got to go through with the ceremony as well . ’
23 Jehan had been certain before he had asked the question that Jehana did not intend to go through with the match .
24 You see , I refused to go through with the wedding unless he promised to hand this over before we left the reception . ’
25 Then he pulled down the oven door , smelt the sweet , fatty smell of the meat and knew that it was probably this very fact that accounted for his decision to go through with the business .
26 ‘ Perhaps you men would like to go through into the study .
27 The photographer and his wife Jane had been about to go through into the concert hall when Leeson saw Lowell standing on his own .
28 Mark Cameron ( 1987 ) felt that the knot symbolized possession by a man , a token of the collective sacred marriage which all young people had to go through as the culmination of their initiation sequence .
29 Er after deliberate first we wondered whether they ought to go through onto the racecourse and then we decided no probably the best place for them would be round the back of the main stand .
30 At the moment none of them 's going to sit through to the end .
  Next page