Example sentences of "be [vb pp] through [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 All steel parts are checked through on a magnaflux machine .
2 First built at the time of Edward I , it has been occupied through to the present day .
3 The October revolution had been carried through on the assumption that Russia , although a relatively backward country and hardly ‘ ripe ’ for revolution in a Marxist sense , could help to bring about a European and later a worldwide transition to a communist social order .
4 The red theme has been carried through to the goblets that the family use every Christmas , the napkins and the candlesticks .
5 The ban has been pushed through by the Labour group which regained control of the county council in May .
6 Christian Burial of the Dead combines with Buddha 's Fire Sermon , but both are shot through with the sort of primitive fertility cycle hinted at in ‘ Death by Water ’ .
7 Furthermore , the written narratives which constitute the novel are shot through with the vestiges of oral culture : incomplete sentences , a tendency toward verbosity and digression , as well as an abundance of transcriptions of actual dialogue .
8 He wrote immediately to the SMG , cutting off all contact : ‘ I am not interested in agencies who politic and posture for no other reason than to promote themselves … secondly , as I am not presently able to place any trust in you , I must insist that any further matters you wish to raise are channelled through to a suitable agency , viz the local council or HCRC . ’
9 The protocol of chain-pulling in multiple-occupancy urinals has not been thought through by the Works and Buildings Department .
10 Continuous flow machines form a tunnel made up of separate sections , wash and rinse , which operate continuously while items are drawn through on a link conveyor .
11 Decompression times are scrolled through on the display for repetitive dive planning .
12 What joins the various devices under a common heading is the fact that in all cases the discourses invoked are spoken through by a voice which has little or no inherent identity of its own but is defined as a principle of interrogative conjunction .
13 Pumping air into these causes water to be sucked through with the bubbles as they rise to the surface .
14 Just as the will of God can not be known without the revelation of the Spirit , so the service of God can not be carried through without the equipment of that same Spirit .
15 But these efforts are of no eventual pedagogic value unless they can be carried through into the classroom context .
16 Unlike the situation at a comparable juncture in western development , however , this revolution could not be carried through under the leadership of the bourgeoisie .
17 A project is a project , he wrote , and once it is begun it should be carried through to the end , regardless of doubts about meaning , doubts about long runs , or doubts about anything else , unless the body screams for you to stop , of course one can not go on for long against the screaming of the body , but then that merely means one has miscalculated , it merely means one has begun too soon or too late or perhaps that the entire project was a miscalculation .
18 The problem was that it was theoretically possible for someone to introduce poison gas into a remote and perhaps unguarded part of the system and for the noxious fumes to be carried through to the General-Secretary 's apartments or office .
19 In her statement to MPs , Mrs Bottomley said the reforms would be carried through by an implementation group , and a London initiative zone would make sure the reforms cover the most deprived areas of the city .
20 That legislation can not be carried through in the remainder of this Parliament and will be a matter for the next Parliament .
21 ‘ You 're happy with the way funds will be channelled through to the project , I assume ? ’
22 The 25-year-old will cost around £700,000 and the signing is likely to be pushed through in the next few days in time for the Christmas programme .
23 Althusser thus suggests that history can only be thought through as a permanent contradiction : it is a totality , but that totality is a decentred structure in dominance in which each history 's history is defined not through its identity with , or difference from , a general history but by being differentiated from every other history , on which it is necessarily also therefore dependent , in a kind of negative totalization .
24 For over two days no food or supplies could be got through to the defenders , nor any wounded evacuated .
25 If just a single layer is used it will be stitched through to the outer shell of the bag at intervals and sometimes stitched right through to the lining on cheaper bags .
26 On either side of the gangway doors were small doors on the floor level ; these were for the double purpose of allowing a hosepipe to be brought through from the line for washing out purposes , and also to allow free escape of water .
27 Instead , a full selection procedure was to be gone through during the lifetime of a Parliament , thus allowing other aspiring candidates to be considered .
28 A few days after Hitler 's repetition of his ‘ prophecy ’ on 30 January 1942 , the SD reported that his words had been ‘ interpreted to mean that the Führer 's battle against the Jews would be followed through to the end with merciless consistency , and that very soon the last Jew would disappear from European soil ’ .
29 Many valuable contacts were made and several projects that could not be implemented during 1990 will be followed through in the future .
30 In many organisations you will be put through to a secretary whose job it is to filter calls .
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