Example sentences of "through in [art] [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 The telephonist at the other end was cheery and casual , and he was put through in no time to someone called Cyril Causeley , who , the girl said , was editor for the Walter Machin books .
2 They must muddle through in a fog of grumble and contempt .
3 We 've still got the Children Act coming through , I know that may appear a bit odd , but that Act was in fact in nineteen eighty nine , but it 's come through in a sense on an incremental basis , and it 's accepted by the Department of Health and er , the S S I , that indeed , and the Audit Commission , that there are elements in the present settlement for the Children Act .
4 It makes far more sense to do two for the first day , then you can judge how many you can get through in a day from those two .
5 Fixing a three-hole mixer with pop-up waste may look a little complicated , but if you follow through in a sequence of operations it 's not too difficult .
6 The Jerry troops just sort of walked right through in a lot of places , and the next thing anyone knew we were retreating .
7 I choose this example because it has been well worked through in a paper by Betty Lou Dubois in Language and Society ( 1987 ) .
8 Any investigation , such as a court would be obliged , in this type of case , to undertake , into the propriety of the internal procedures gone through in the course of passing a Bill would conflict with the modus vivendi in which Parliament and the courts had tacitly acquiesced since the celebrated Hansard litigation of the 1840s .
9 That legislation can not be carried through in the remainder of this Parliament and will be a matter for the next Parliament .
10 That raises the question of whether or not that gives him the sort of ‘ job security ’ necessary to experiment with the new players coming through in the hope of building a side capable of beating All Blacks , Wallabies and Springboks .
11 No , I would say that if an independent assessor has been dispatched to this is a good point worth bringing through in the event of erm a disagreement between ourselves and a policy holder , the policy holder has a number of aspects that they can they can approach .
12 The reforms of Joseph II ( 1780–90 ) , which were carried through in the spirit of the Age of Enlightenment , included a secularisation of education and the recognition of the rights of the Slav subjects of the Empire to instruct in their own language .
13 Others , seeing what so many people put themselves through in the quest for slimness , just decide not to bother .
14 Simply heated through in the oven with fresh butter , smokies are to me one of the most exquisite of our national specialities .
15 Warm through in the oven for 2–3 minutes .
16 A historian concerned to reconstruct the life of Abraham as exactly as possible wants to know what changes the story of Abraham went through in the process of retelling .
17 The closure problem has come through in the appearance of another function F in the equation for E ; F is related to the Fourier transform of the triple correlation .
18 Whether enough other Labour hopefuls win through in the ring of nondescript suburban and outer-London seats may ultimately depend on whether voters are more impressed by Labour 's dismal record in the city , or by its attractive and well-packaged promises .
19 Large numbers of waders pass through in the autumn including curlew , sandpiper and ruff .
20 As a testimony to one trade-unionist 's authority and stature , carried through in the face of some hostility within the administration and somewhat glacial relations with Denis Healey at the Treasury , it was a remarkable accomplishment .
21 I say publicly that they are mistaken in trying to push this Bill through in the face of severe and fierce opposition , not just from committed Labour supporters but from rank-and-file Conservatives and from people who have no particular political We were lucky enough to see my hon. Friend the Minister of State a couple of times , and we tried to explain to him how we in Leicestershire would lose out .
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