Example sentences of "and [art] [noun pl] [adv prt] " in BNC.

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1 When I got back I sat in front of the big glass with the door shut and the lights off , till dawn .
2 The vehicle was locked and the lights off .
3 Staying in her flat with a crate of wine and the lights off .
4 Such estates , if sensitively planned can produce fine architecture and the spaces around and between houses can provide endless design opportunities .
5 If the siege of Sarajevo is lifted and the roads out are safe , thousands will bolt , leaving him a president shorn of land and people .
6 Several hundred Kurds picketed the Home Office in protest at the continuing detentions and the deportations back to Turkey where they are said to face oppression and torture .
7 ‘ I get home about 3.30 am , take a bottle of Evian water and the papers up to my office and tune into Bob Harris on Radio One .
8 As we saw when considering the interactionist critique of positivism , there are two particularly important reasons for this : first , the processes of definition and application produce the data specifying the nature of , and the trends in , crime , and the characteristics of criminals that are subsequently used by criminologists to construct their theories and explanations ; second , these processes of definition and application have consequences for the meanings , implications and justifications that those ‘ labelled ’ by them give to their own actions .
9 back down the road … and further Solar Flair is still going … they 've cracked it at last … and are up to forty five miles an hour … next stop is Adelaide the city that closes its streets to grand prix cars … today … the roads are open and the crowds out to welcome them in …
10 Dinner was nearly over and the ladies about to leave the room , when Charity in a low urgent aside , tried to make Charles give some impression of a man worthy of consideration .
11 If they did not reach the very poorest , they went further down the scale than most model buildings , and provided the sort of accommodation the poor were used to , despite the introduction of a guardian and a gate to keep the transients at bay and the tenants up to scratch .
12 Erm well we put two cats through as well so erm I think it all in all with the flights out and the flights back and the quarantine it must have been about three thousand pounds .
13 If any wonder whether they made the right decision to come home and marry a British man , Dolly Howard who danced round the world had the wittiest appreciation of the difference between the continental men and the boys back home :
14 We 've already had the National Front and the Liberals round , and they were very interesting , so now it 's your turn .
15 A HUNDRED years ago , Gladstone celebrated his 80th birthday vainly trying to get himself and the Liberals back into power .
16 I know I 'm sorry for a war having to break out , and the youngsters out there having to risk their lives , I mean God forbid we got another war .
17 Er , and the courts by and large agree to erm , give us the seventy pounds out ev every time , but even so , even if we get the award of the costs , then the difficulty is , is , is in getting those costs in .
18 and she found that she could n't get the settee and the chairs in because , if you remember , they were sort of open armed , they , they were very wide .
19 Mavis stands in the book shop writing the name and the things down you see and then she goes to the library , she has n't been out properly yet with her knee has she ?
20 We would bring all that together in a strategic authority , which would not be dictated to by Whitehall and the mandarins down here .
21 It 's smashing walking along this track because it 's firm underfoot and the views back to Malham and over to Great Scar and Attermire are worth nine out of ten in anybody 's book .
22 and the bits in between .
23 ‘ When yow 've drunk yer tea , we 'll get the mattress and the bedsteads in , ’ he said impatiently .
24 Sue is ju and the pots back in the
25 They were everywhere , and the pots out on the side as well .
26 In some cases , the collapse of Roman technology , and the economic structure which supported it , marks a clear break between what went before and the developments through to the present day .
27 This chapter investigates how that world appeared to the players and the lookers on , both at the time and afterwards .
28 If that is a benefit short of trust status , why is it necessary to force through trust status while encouraging local hospital management and in so doing to bring the assets , the buildings and the personnel out of local health service management ?
29 They are Alexander the Great ; the Silver Shields ( a Macedonian corps d'élite of the early hellenistic period ) ; and the Spartans up to the date of their defeat at the hands of the Thebans at Leuktra in 371 .
30 Indeed , he frequently managed both to play the French and the Americans off against each other and then to blame them when anything went wrong .
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