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

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1 From here we carried on along a river and soon arrived at Sokol which has just one house — a traditional forester 's cabin with deer antlers above the front door .
2 Feeling somehow cheated , but also extremely relieved , we carried on along the trail
3 They carried on down the lane towards a farm .
4 These were their topics and subjects of discussion , carried on without the need of speech .
5 As her friends left the city one by one , she carried on at the Hotel Normandie in spite of the declining trade .
6 He could n't see you if you were standing right in front of him , but he carried on at the anvil and used to feel the iron he was working . ’
7 So during my three years at University College Swansea I carried on at the shop in the evenings doing the ordering , and on Saturdays running the general book department and the educational department .
8 They carried on to the foot of the garden where there was a small neat wooden gate with a hedgerow on either side .
9 After another battle with the gate they carried on to the end of the lane and walked on to the road and into the sunlight .
10 Instead of turning left towards the village they carried on to the right .
11 The demanding role meant Crawford had no understudy to begin with , so he carried on with a wrist cast , and Onna White changed the choreography to allow for this .
12 The doctor switched it off and carried on with the work in hand .
13 Undismayed , Aarau carried on with the building of the Laurenzenvorstadt to house its responsibilities as the capital of the canton .
14 For it is the kind of work that these individuals carried on with the knowledge that they were seeking to improve life on earth , that set the example for the vast mass of the human race to follow and thereby perpetuate , albeit largely unknowingly , the strengthening and augmentation of the Created God .
15 I ignored him and carried on with the cocktail party .
16 Thereafter we carried on with the hearing of the argument on whether Thorpe J. was or was not right to make the order which he did in the different circumstances which then existed and as to the more general issues raised by this appeal .
17 In July 1831 notice was given that the partnership agreement between Peregrine Phillips senior , John Thorne , and Peregrine Phillips junior , was dissolved with respect to Phillips junior , although his father and Thorne carried on with the business .
18 Back in the kitchen , Carolyn gave Annie a saucer of currants to eat ( she ate them so beautifully , one by one , held painstakingly pincered between thumb and index finger , her other fingers cocked like a tea-sipping lady ) and carried on with the food .
19 This chap came out and carried on with the beat .
20 And she carried on with the arrangement she was making , cheerfully unaware of how great a change in attitude that charitable thought represented .
21 Dad knew it was no good arguing with her and he carried on with the job .
22 When we were alone in the room , she carried on with the repair job .
23 I took sips of my wine and carried on with the supper , and at one point I went across to the bookcase and idly picked up a petal that was lying there .
24 Erm , that carried on for a while , I thought I was doing very very well , being able to do a job like that .
25 carried on for a while realized in the end he had to come back
26 ‘ An officer signalled for her to stop but she carried on for a mile and mounted the kerb on one occasion , ’ Tony Malyon , prosecuting , told Pontypool magistrates .
27 When I went in , I carried on into the kitchen without taking my coat off , put the kettle on and then went into the living room .
28 They carried on into the marquee , where eight ten-foot-long buffet tables decorated with pale pink and white angelicas held dozens of silver tureens , filled to capacity with imported smoked salmon , lobster , and finely sliced fillet of beef in aspic .
29 From it she took a book , which she carried over to the dressing-table .
30 Instead of water lapping the romantic old stone walls of wharves and warehouses , palaces and towers , there is mud — a pallid dark grey mud , littered with the dunnage of long-dispersed cargoes , bits of broken packing cases , carried up with the tide and brought down again , the rusted frames of worn-out bicycles , the pathetic remnants of somebody 's pram , upside down , its upholstery all gone , motionless , futile wheels apparently beseeching something from the air .
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