Example sentences of "and carry [adv] [prep] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Good food shops in the village , but a great saving can be made if the bulk of provision is bought in Grenoble and carried up by bus or car .
2 A coalition government was formed in May 1915 , continued under Lloyd George in December 1916 , and carried over into peacetime in 1918 .
3 Army helicopters hovered over the polling stations , which were surrounded by soldiers , proving FMLN allegations that these elections were fraudulent and carried out amidst fear and intimidation .
4 BGS activities overseas are mainly funded by , and carried out on behalf of , the British government 's Overseas Development Administration ( ODA ) .
5 Shiu 's assessment ( this volume ) , the ‘ Chelsea Diagnostic Mathematics Tests ’ and the written test used in the Denvir and Brown study ( 1987 ) which were discussed under the heading ‘ Diagnostic assessment ’ are all , when used without individual interviews , examples of formative assessment and carried out before teaching , because they indicate suitable starting points .
6 William , though himself without a helmet , fought like a lion to avenge his uncle 's death but was eventually overborne by weight of numbers as well as by another sword thrust from behind — and carried off into captivity .
7 To help those in this position Scottish Provident has published a free Guide to the Carry Back and Carry Forward of Tax Relief .
8 Well it 's ‘ easy come , easy go ’ in those places , you should put it behind you and carry on with life , that 's the best thing .
9 With them , it 's : ‘ You 've got to pass your exams and carry on in education . ’
10 Reactionary trade union officials who had steadfastly declared that they would not stand on a public platform with revolutionary workers , found themselves caught up in the stream and carried forward to participation in great united front unemployed demonstrations .
11 This leads to the applicant 's second ground for supporting the judgment under appeal , namely that whatever the words of the Act may mean , they must be understood as qualified by a tacit exception , preserving the ancient right of silence in its particular manifestation of the immunity from being asked questions after charge , previously embodied in the Judges ' Rules and carried forward into paragraph 16.5 of Code C.
12 The Way then leads to Langstrothdale over to Oughtershaw and carries on to cross a section of the Pennine Way , giving fine views of the Three Peaks en route .
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