Example sentences of "set [adv] [adv] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 With his amused , unshocked expression , his bush-hat set so jauntily on the back of his head , this American was difficult to take .
2 On the Somerset Levels , inundated by heavy floods in 1872 and 1873 , a report described how ‘ Ague set in early in the spring and is now very prevalent … among the poorer families who are badly fed and clothed . ’
3 Mr Stephens was careful to read the short poems and finished up with one set not far from the place at which John was hired .
4 He set off cheerfully for a final phase in Worcestershire , saying complacently , ‘ I do n't want any bands here when I come back . ’
5 We finished serving lunch and coffee and cleared up , and as soon as I decently could I left the kitchen and set off forward up the train .
6 Mark set off downhill towards the Refuge d'Argentiere , 500 metres below us .
7 Joseph lunged toward it , but the sight of him terrorized the gibbon further , and it set off frantically towards the only visible refuge .
8 FORMER Beirut hostage Brian Keenan and his beautiful blonde wife , Audrey Doyle , set off today for a secret honeymoon destination .
9 ‘ Messrs. Gould and Gunn set off to-day to the head of the [ Recherche ] Bay to a plain , which appears to run up many miles into the country the hill called South Cape , which presents towards the bay a steep and particularly denuded surface …
10 Vite ! " he yelled , clapping his hands , and the coolie set off instantly at a frantic gallop along the boulevard .
11 Even so , it was a couple of days more before the great host , now estimated at between fifty and sixty thousand men , set off southwards from the Burgh Muir of Edinburgh for Lauderdale and the Tweed .
12 The ‘ speeder set off again with a renewed sense of purpose .
13 She turned from the shop-window and set off briskly down the street towards the Stefansplatz , Karelius striding alongside .
14 Then they form up into single file with as many as fifty in a column , each animal touching the rear end of the one ahead with its stick-like antennae , and set off briskly across the sandy sea floor , heading for deeper water .
15 The guide nodded and set off briskly across the floor .
16 He had n't time , he thought , and he set off briskly towards the blacksmith 's , his rucksack and his bags already bulging .
17 Fearon dragged it on over his sweater , tugged a disreputable flat cap over his wet hair and set off briskly towards the yard .
18 At the Grand , David Swan fastened his amended photopass to his jacket and set off briskly towards the conference centre some two hundred yards away .
19 Next day they left Seton to his problems and set off northwards up the coast for Dunbar , thirty miles .
20 Lord Hesketh , the chief whip in the Lords , also went for flower power in the form of a pink carnation set off nicely by a red bow tie and cream shirt .
21 She set off boldly towards the fence and only had to put her feet down speedily once .
22 Four bombs , set off earlier in the day in Santiago by suspected members of the ultra-right September 11 Commando caused minor structural damage .
23 With a half-shudder , she left the lower bowel and set off gingerly along the rather treacherous surface of the greater intestine which coiled before her — a tunnel she was n't too sure she saw the light at the end of .
24 In his lunch breaks Doisneau pored over books on photography , and at weekends he set off alone with a heavy wooden camera and tripod to capture the first of the ‘ personal ’ photographs that would be the basis of his life 's work .
25 With that he relaxed his grasp and set off alone in the direction of the Chelonians .
26 The party set off downstream along the river bank and Rostov concentrated on making it look as if he had been riding bareback all his life .
27 TIPSY cyclist Jeffrey Maidment set off home after a night in the pub — and rode the wrong way down the M27 motorway .
28 He could easily be presented as a modest example of Samuel Smiles 's self-help — the illegitimate son of a farm-servant and a weaver , totally lacking in formal education , who advanced from Oldham textile-worker to foreman in an engineering works , until in 1861 he set up independently as a dentist , dying worth almost £15,000 , which was by no means negligible : a lifelong radical Liberal and temperance advocate .
29 For this purpose the investigators are using the UK Family Expenditure Survey pooled over the years 1970 to 1985 set up jointly with the Institute for Fiscal Studies .
30 Eventually , a central department set up jointly by the refugee committees helped to alleviate major problems like the treatment of refugees as Nazis , refugees and Nazis being kept in close proximity , inadequate accommodation , lack of adequate medical care and the separation of families .
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