Example sentences of "[verb] and [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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31 the way in which people interact is designed and ordered by the organisation structure so as to achieve joint ( organisational ) objectives .
32 But only the genuine Toyota part is designed and engineered to the same high standards of quality as the original equipment .
33 He also told reporters : ‘ It was completed on time and is a first class facility , designed and engineered to the very highest standards .
34 Both productions are designed and directed by the same team responsible for last year 's successful production of IOLANTHE .
35 Designed and produced by The Concept Partnership Ltd .
36 council liable in negligence for injury caused to original tenant arising in £ residential premises designed and owned by the council .
37 council liable in negligence for injury caused to original tenant arising in residential premises designed and owned by the council .
38 This survey was designed and supervised by the Library 's Research Officer , , in collaboration with , Planning and Services Officer , whose responsibilities at the time of the Survey included matters relating to conservation .
39 Now it was leaping and hopping among the grass tussocks , striking at the two rabbits with terrible darts of its head .
40 ‘ It sprang from the tightness of his jeans , leaping and rearing from the shorts that draped it .
41 the date when the total quantity of petroleum won and saved from the original 8.62608 per cent interest in the Ninian field attributable to the Group reaches 120 million barrels ; or
42 I guess it was n't the first tournament to be won and lost on the Road Hole at St Andrews .
43 Between £60 and £70 million will be won and lost on the Grand National ; a fortune riding on 40 horses .
44 EVER since independence , Indian elections have been won and lost in the north .
45 ‘ Boxing titles are won and lost in the ring and in order to be a champion , you must fight the champion and beat the champion .
46 It was noted however and then the theory was that perhaps you had stumbled when you were out walking and fallen in the river .
47 He stopped walking and looked at the scrubland now directly in front of them .
48 We enjoyed walking and playing in the surrounding countryside .
49 Leonard spent hours walking and cycling around the neighbourhood looking for it .
50 He did a lot of walking now — walking and going to the pictures .
51 A young man with a bad case of acne approached and pointed at the phone .
52 This principle applies in full force in dealing with the harmonic idioms of the present day , in which discords are approached and quitted with the utmost freedom , and there is often little or no feeling of resolution at all , for there must always be ‘ part-writing ’ and the notes must ‘ go somewhere ’ and not be left in the air , so to speak , even if the progressions are not in accord with nineteenth-century harmonic notions .
53 Once the baby is born , bouts of anger , sulking and withdrawing in the early stages of parenthood suggest that the identification continues ; men can sometimes be as post-natally depressed as their partners .
54 We 're going off ! ’ screams every nerve of the BSM graduate 's 25 years of road driving as Brundle approaches the first corner at more than 120 mph and heels the car , its tyres wailing and jouncing on the limits of their purchase , across the corner .
55 Mary tottered up on her perch from side to side but nothing wiped the mild , sweet benignity from her doll 's face as she dropped the dew of her mercy down from heaven on the mortal exiles below wailing and weeping in the vale of tears .
56 And after as many tender words as he could think of , to try and lighten the load , to try and make it seem less of a confession , even to try and compensate for the shared and shaming confidence , he told Fergus that he had been responsible for the fire that had burned down the barn near Port Ann , fifteen years earlier .
57 The only hope was to try and paddle to the bank , then work our way back into the safe waters of the Cherwell by pulling on the branches of the shrubs and trees that overhung the river .
58 The excitement that was building up inside her had nothing to do with the fact that Ace Barton was probably just a few feet away from her , she told herself as she tried desperately hard to try and disentangle from the different voices one she hoped to recognise .
59 An incident during the life of Haymo in 1326 , explains the reason for the building of the high walls around the palace : In this year Haymo was called to London for a meeting arranged by the Archbishop of Canterbury , to try and bring about the reconciliation of the King , Edward II and his Queen .
60 He assumed the best approach was to try and joke with the audience and he asked : ‘ You would n't say to Shakespeare , that was a good book , can we have another chapter now ?
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