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

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1 I suppose I could carry on with the cataloguing , ’ she suggested .
2 His widow , Margaret , said : ‘ Alfred told me that I should carry on with the case if he died , and that is exactly what I will do . ’
3 Or — and something came apart in his stomach and turned a revolution and plummeted downwards — were they all politely and patiently waiting with well-controlled longing because it would not be too long now before they could get home and carry on with the lives they preferred without him ?
4 Those who have been successful may carry on with the course , and need to be registered with the BIE .
5 Those of us who did carry on with the flight , masochistically addicted to the hellish aimlessness of it , were obliged to leave at New Delhi , and spend a day selling brightly coloured scarves and small gold elephants on a souvenir stall .
6 But since we ca n't carry on with the experiment now we 've got to leave that till later on .
7 And if you 're okay overnight then you can carry on with the pack as directed on Thursday morning
8 He adds the other band members Lorayne Robinson and Ruby Washington will carry on with the group for the sake of their friends who died .
9 Perhaps you 'd carry on with the Leicester ladies , and Gladys Brown . ’
10 If you wish to take up these lessons ( which will carry on throughout the year ) please let me know as soon as possible so that we can arrange the groups .
11 This is not sad because the important part of humanity , its ability to respond emotionally , will carry on in the androids .
12 They 're always the ones that are a bit more boisterous , whereas the older ones you have to physically carry on in the shop floor , the students do n't , and that 's what gives them a bad name .
13 The 1896 discovery by Eduard Buchner ( 1860–1917 ) that fermentation could carry on in the absence of living cells seemed like the final nail in the coffin .
14 She did not even go as far as her room — the sound of the door being unlocked , opening and closing again should surely not carry down to the hall .
15 Those sorts of accounts do n't carry much in the way of other books . ’
16 Furthermore , different voice settings typically characterise different languages , and these settings may carry over into the pronunciation of a second language ( Laver 1991 : 248 ) .
17 Yes you would you just wonder whether Forest back four might just push up a little bit higher and let the ball carry through to the keeper every time .
18 Hopefully it can carry through to the end of the season . ’
19 The moral of this tale you can carry away at the end of my story of two Corbetts .
20 I walk upstream ; upstream because I can wade to the other bank if I need to and any disturbance will not carry far against the current .
21 free up shipping and road transport markets so that British operators can carry freely within the EC ;
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