Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] [noun] have [verb] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | Ideally , of course , there should be the choice , especially for islanders having to work on the mainland who want to come home for the weekend . |
2 | Only after weeks had passed with him ablaze like this did the hag stir on one occasion when he came to call and curse him — ; or he felt she did — with her eyes open and one hand raised and pointing . |
3 | This island alone in Indonesia has clung to the old Hindu religion and culture . |
4 | Ambient hipsters from all over France have flocked to this low-key affair , lured by invitations promising ‘ Smarts Drinks ’ and a chat with someone called ‘ Trash ’ . |
5 | Nevertheless the Trotskyists themselves split , on the issue of whether or not to co-operate with the ICP , and , just as the VNQDD had been destroyed as a competitor with the Communist Party by French repression after Yen-Bay , so the French colonial government , shortly after war had begun in 1939 , rounded up virtually the entire leadership of the Trotskyist International Communist League , as it was then called : a coup from which the movement never recovered . |
6 | Although the move away from Keynesianism had begun during the mid-1970s under a Labour government , the Thatcherite programme explicitly rejected the previous consensus and embraced a liberal political economy based on the restoration of market forces and market values . |
7 | The reorganisation of DTI away from sectors has proved to be successful . |
8 | This vast product-line combined with an ability to deliver quickly from stock has led to the supplying of thousands of satisfied professionals in research institutes , laboratories and chemical process industries worldwide . |
9 | The magazine , through his influence , became more regularized ; readers noted that something perilously close to marketing had intruded into its anarchy . |
10 | Many hunters and men moving close to nature have commented on this sixth sense , warning them of danger . |
11 | And , people from the town centre who were going home to Stoke had to go over the bridge . |
12 | That the disease ranges widely in severity has led to suggestions of a genotype-phenotype correlation in CF. The most common mutations in Israeli patients with CF — W1282X and F508 — were shown to be associated with a severe disease . |
13 | If you 're buying a new computer screen it will now by law have to comply with European standards in terms of low radiation emissions and lack of screen flicker . |
14 | Since last week 's bumper post bag caused our 50-storey multi-plex office block to cave in under the sheer weight of ever-hopeful readers ' entries , we here at Bizzerk have had to temporarily relocate to a Hawaiian island where cargo boats deliver letters by the sackload for our native postal workers to process . |
15 | Since last week 's bumper post bag caused our 50-storey multi-plex office block to cave in under the sheer weight of ever-hopeful readers ' entries , we here at Bizzerk have had to temporarily relocate to a Hawaiian island where cargo boats deliver letters by the sackload for our native postal workers to process . |
16 | But then my lord Prior of Scone had appeared like a miracle , with a great army behind him , and had killed every horseman . |
17 | I shall then in fact have to stay on the alert . ’ |
18 | ‘ MANY as are the virtues of the Moon under Water I think that the garden is the best feature , because it allows whole families to go there instead of Mum having to stay at home and mind baby while Dad goes out alone . |
19 | One of the great advantages was that instead of journalists having to plough through yards and yards of dusty cuttings , they could simply call the information they needed to screen . |
20 | Wilson , shut up in her own world all winter , was astonished to learn what everyone else in Florence had known for many a month — French troops had poured into Piedmont and 1848 was to be repeated all over again . |
21 | The argument that a ban will drive ivory trading underground is plainly absurd , since up to 90 per cent of all ivory currently in trade has come from elephants illegally slaughtered by poachers . |