Example sentences of "[vb pp] [adv] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | The crops were stacked right up to the roof ridge , or close to it , so using almost all the roof space . |
2 | This waistcoat had flap-pockets and reached down almost to the knees : it was fastened right up to the neck with horse-shoe buttons , leaving just enough space for the red-spotted muffler or wrapper to be seen underneath . |
3 | The Warlords had already marched right out of the arena . |
4 | Personnel changes have percolated right up to the boardroom . |
5 | The restoration of this historic fighter has been completed right down to the last detail , it carries a complete set of camera ports , although the cameras have not been fitted . |
6 | A diver had found it out at sea trapped beneath the underground storage container from a petrol station , the container having been ripped right out of the ground . |
7 | This music , incidentally , was a vital influence in British and American bourgeois domestic song , an influence which can in fact be traced right through to the years after the First World War , in such singers as Al Jolson . |
8 | It 's something that runs through mining folklore and can be traced right back into the lore of medieval German miners . |
9 | Hereford cattle have a long pedigree … they can be traced right back to the red cattle of Roman Britain . |
10 | My unfaithfulness will be eased gently out along the process of life , dispensing with small fragments of guilt as I go . |
11 | There was a very considerable consensus on the elements selected , and these choices , in the order in which they appear in the text , are given below along with the percentage ( rounded to the nearest integer ) of the informants who identified each one . |
12 | The glass was placed gently back on the counter in front of Newman . |
13 | The bottom 's dropped right out of the market . ’ |
14 | behind the antique shop , and we went along and had a look and at ten o'clock it had dropped right down to the second step from the bottom roughly |
15 | My sister 's dead body was carried slowly out of the house and through the village , followed by all of us . |
16 | In Chapters 14 and 15 , the extent to which their principles are applied to the relatively new media of television , film and video will be considered separately along with the statutory duties and voluntary censorship systems which work in these media to regulate the treatment of controversial subjects . |
17 | Screaming , Duvall was sucked backwards out of the window in a cloud of broken glass and was instantly gone . |
18 | Aspects of these measures are considered further on in the chapter . |
19 | We had fellows who had come straight out of the First World War , afraid of nothing . |
20 | Her family history is equally dramatic and could almost have come straight out of the pages of a Barbara Cartland novel . |
21 | Even though we spent that money we are projected to come in with balances of three million pounds in excess of the budget figure set by the Conservatives , and that is a six million pounds difference that 's come straight out of the twenty-four and I think it tells us two things . |
22 | Part of her was appalled at the ease with which she had slotted straight back into the military lifestyle ; part of her welcomed the safety of knowing exactly where she fitted in and what she was supposed to do . |
23 | They say who they want to send it to , add a few notes , send it off and are dropped straight back into the spreadsheet . ’ |
24 | I made this ascent on a lowering afternoon that turned thundery , and I stood only momentarily I will admit on the bridge , as the storms brewed noisily up in the mountains all around and the lightning began . |
25 | So they have plenty of time to grow to a respectable size and are merely carried passively up to the surface with the rest of the magma when it is erupted , and are distributed uniformly throughout it . |
26 | Nor did he introduce himself to Ellen or Thessy , but instead looked warily up into the rigging as though he expected to be ambushed from the foremast 's crosstrees . |
27 | She had dropped miserably on to the lowest stair . |
28 | On the coach Geoffrey had stared morosely out of the window ; now he stormed along the wing with ferocious determination . |
29 | The PSC in Gazankulu also needs to negotiate with the Lebowa authorities and information has to be disseminated right up to the village authority level — the chiefs and their councils . |
30 | Funny thing was they had no gardens and were built right up against the old City Rampart . |