Example sentences of "then [adv prt] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 This led to a discussion of favourite books and authors , then on to music and art .
2 Feeling rather uncomfortably damp and dirty , she set off again , turning off presently into a deep wood , through which a footpath led to the deer-park and then on to Granny Fordham 's cottage .
3 After , that was that , and then on to Road .
4 My first visit is to the Red Cross , to pick up medicines requested on the previous patrol and then on to visit the Franciscan nuns , who run a school in Nicosia .
5 And then on to father .
6 But despite the comments I flew off to Geneva last summer ( with a very ‘ full pack ’ ) and then on by train to Houches — the start and finish of the ‘ Tour Du Mont Blanc ’ ( TMB ) .
7 That that part of the earth will be in darkness it will be in night time on that side of the earth and from then on in space there will be darkness because the earth will be in the way .
8 Then on in darkness down to where Liddel joined Esk , cross into England at Kirkandrews and , avoiding Kirklinton and Brampton , populous areas , cross the Lyne valley and the moorlands of Bolton and Walton Mosses to the Roman Wall at Birdoswald .
9 Or jolly then along with French/Spanish/German for Fun book and cassette packs ( ages 5–11 ) , £8.95 each .
10 The tears welled , beautifully , in her eyes as she gazed up into his face , then down in sorrow .
11 Then off to North Parade in 1833 , where two ‘ Miss Titford 's ’ followed the same business as milliners , the other , Elizabeth , being almost certainly Mary 's niece , daughter of her brother Benjamin who had died in London in 1816 .
12 The evenings would usually finish on the terrace for a few quiet drinks with new found friends and then off to bed .
13 Lays down the law , then off to golf and booze . ’
14 All right then.Come on then up to bed ..
15 ‘ We 'll have one last gallop down to Lambs Dell and then up to home , what ? ’ he said , his pastoral vision of the Bagots already forgotten .
16 Doyle looked at his watch and then up at Tug .
17 line manager does an evaluation on the day , but then back at base we do an evaluation for the the line manager .
18 The historical ruler , who might or might not have made disastrous political mistakes , gave way to the woman who might or might not have written the Casket Letters ; and scholars plunged into the absorbing task of deciding whether letters whose originals had not been seen since 1584 , and whose texts had been translated from French into Scots and then back into French , were forgeries or not .
19 The 6 hour 45 minute trip took them to Amiens , Mannheim , Kitzingen , Wurzburg , Frankfurt , Brussels , Wing and then back to base .
20 Which involved going to evening classes and er then back to work and this involved nights regular , so it was a bit a bit of a dash , sleeping , evening class and then catching a bus which the first one , nine o'clock and to the colliery and starting .
21 Er , then back to depot in forty five minutes because you work your way back up you know , towards , back towards the depot , you 're talking three hours forty five minutes , and exactly half your time is just spent on the road .
22 Travis carried her outside , then back to bed when she called , handling her with a care that would have made her feel cherished if it had n't been so impersonal .
23 It is all spell-binding Gothic stuff : an empty hotel corridor , a fire , a return to realism with the dismissive studio boss , then back to fantasy with the product of Fink 's imagination .
24 Then back to square one .
25 Then it 's disk three , and then back to disk one and
26 Follow the forest paths around to the left to posts 45 and 44 then back to post 43 and along the road back to the visitor centre .
27 She went to the window and watched him into the street , then into his car , then out of sight .
28 Barbara , 60 , from Widnes , has always made her own clothes , originally to save cash and then out of habit .
29 Barbara ( 60 ) has always made her own clothes , originally through austerity and then out of habit .
30 Depends what you mean by ‘ weather ’ , but yes , the countryside of Sussex is constantly suffering the attack of rain and the rain either has to soak into the ground where very often it erm dissolves material and eventually finds its way to rivers so that all rivers are carrying material from inland in solution out to the sea , or if erm you get very heavy rain , then the water actually runs off the surface of the ground , and as it runs off it will carry particulate material out into the rivers and then out to sea .
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