Example sentences of "set [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 You need to set down at the start what you expect to achieve .
2 But disappointment began to set in by the time the ballot boxes had been emptied , and when the second stage of the count began , at 12.45 a.m. , it soon became clear that it would be a two-horse race .
3 Hundreds of people line the banks of the River Coruh in Eastern Turkey eagerly awaiting three huge river rafts , each with a 24 strong crew , to set off down the rapids .
4 It was eleven o'clock before all the family were in bed , and two o'clock next morning was the latest time to set off with the beehives .
5 She was the last passenger to set off across the tracks , laden with parcels from her shopping trip , and the little boy tagging along behind .
6 But this morning , I must say , I found it quite offensive and it may well have been the urge to demonstrate just how foolish his insinuation had been that caused me to set off up the footpath .
7 My husband and daughter decide to set off up the hill ‘ to look for America ’ .
8 Well , so I 'm going to meet him at Temple Meads and we 're going to set off to the Marquis family abode .
9 She looked as if she were about to set off for a provincial cocktail party , an office party of female executives .
10 A MOTHER has condemned thieves who stole the wheels off the family car just before her cancer victim daughter was to set off for a hospital check up .
11 It was a suspiciously long letter for someone who seldom wrote any , and when Rain was waiting to set off for the office he was still tapping away at it .
12 And it was able to set off on a totally different , and more professional , tack .
13 He now travelled in disguise from St Malo on 18 December 1715 , to Dunkirk , from where , after a six-week wait , he was at last able to set off on a small eight-gun 200-tonner , for Scotland .
14 Well , it happened that Maureen and Aubrey were about to set off on a round-Britain motoring holiday .
15 Fresh from the indulgence of driving the fastest and most powerful Jaguar saloon ever built over several hundred kilometres of demanding roads , I was about to set off on a journey that would take me from one end of Europe to the other .
16 ‘ Guv'nor says you 're to set off on the side nearest him , ’ Bob said briefly .
17 The Vimy was constructed on February 13 , it was No 13 of the batch , the Vickers crew numbered 13 , the Vimy reached Newfoundland on May 26 ( twice 13 ) , Jack arrived in Newfoundland on May 13 , and because 13 was lucky to him Jack wanted to set off on the attempt on June 13 .
18 It was time for News on Sunday to set off on the trail of the people and organizations who had theorized about the prospects for a popular left-wing newspaper for so long .
19 They would expect to learn of the success of the Tay landings , and to set off on the seven miles that would take them to the central strongholds of Alba , already besieged by their fellows .
20 In Dew v. Parsons ( 1819 ) 2 B. & Ald. 562 an attorney was held entitled to set off against a claim by a sheriff the excess amount which he had paid to the sheriff for the issue of warrants over what the sheriff was legally entitled to charge .
21 The vendor 's company may be able to carry earlier losses forward to set off against the gain or if the capital assets were bought by the company only within the past few years , it is possible that there may be a loss rather than a gain .
22 It would have been easier to set off in the daylight but it was n't possible .
23 I met a boy in his mid-twenties , from Kentucky , who had come to New York to set up as a dentist .
24 ‘ He tried to set up as a fridge and freezer engineer , but that did n't work .
25 Would a possible solution be for the son F to set up as a sole trader and eventually move to separate premises with perhaps other family members becoming partners of this business ?
26 He intends to set up as a PR and communications consultant , freelance writer and designer .
27 All systems go , then his father died and he threw in his hand to set up as a GP in Falmouth . ’
28 In this perspective to set up as a writer at all is an extraordinary act , while artist becomes a word only to be invoked only of others , never about the self .
29 In MAKING IT BETTER , the improbably , coolly glamorous Jane Asher plays Diana Harrington , half of a couple who work for the BBC and have sex problems : her husband of 20 years tells her he is leaving her to set up as an homosexual , an announcement which seems to disturb her less than a wheel clamp .
30 She had built up a good little business in the indoor market-hall and now she and George had amassed enough in the bank to set up on a farm of their own .
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