Example sentences of "[verb] [pron] [adv] again [prep] the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 And the two policemen were ushered out of the office and found themselves once again in the hallway .
2 He jerked him to his feet , and separating the thin wrists he held , twisted them together again behind the boy 's back , and so thrust him painfully before him along the passageway to the staircase .
3 Now imagine yourself once again in the room you love .
4 " I do n't think I 'll ever feel anything ever again with the region I sit on , " grinned Chuck as he continued to bounce up and down on the plank bench .
5 You may very well find it possible yet to send them home again in the very minted pieces in which they left home with the lady . ’
6 He fell on his feet , coiled hard into a ball , and used all the weight of his body and the power of his long legs to project him forward again after the enemy who recoiled from his reaching arms .
7 He finished his coffee , slid his papers into a folder and took me forward again to the horse car .
8 ‘ It was not my fault ! ’ she protested involuntarily , and thus brought herself once again under the scrutiny of those keen eyes from the bed .
9 She saw herself once again in the cheval glass .
10 He liked taking them apart and putting them together again in the wrong order to make new toys and would do this all day until he had forgotten what they looked like in the first place .
11 This type of impression reminds one once again of the " infinitive of result " : ( 26 ) He managed to get free .
12 The important place of the analysis of the transition to capitalism in The German Ideology reminds us once again of the primarily political purpose of the anthropological and historical analysis .
13 It makes for a pleasant evening that reminds us once again of the slimline precision of Coward 's comic dialogue and his habit of rendering heterosexual love in terms of recriminatory bickering .
14 Cut each cake into three equal portions horizontally , and sandwich them together again with the buttercream and jam .
15 Knowing an author 's homosexuality makes that decoding far easier ( if at the same time rather less triumphant there 's an undeniable pleasure in finding out that a favourite writer , actor or director you have admired for years turns out to be gay , as you always privately hoped and ‘ knew ’ ) but it returns us once again to the problem of biography , the danger of regressing to a simplistic reading of texts which simply locates their meanings in the author 's life story .
  Next page