Example sentences of "and [noun] through the " in BNC.

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1 4.15PM After the hundredth charred building , I become numbed to the destruction and find myself only stopping to photograph the ironic and unusual : a rental outlet called ‘ Hot Videos ’ up in flames , men carrying couches and lamps through the shattered window of a furniture store next to a large inviting sign : ‘ Come in for real bargains ’ .
2 But what the District continued to seek was the 90% grant which the WEA 's national negotiators had raised unsuccessfully with the Ministry in 1954 and early 1955 : this goal became a recurrent theme of District meetings and literature through the second half of the decade .
3 The broad aims of all of these modules are to develop planning and organisational skills , interpersonal skills and self-awareness through the various experiences that they offer .
4 The formal relationships outlined above need to be complemented by an appreciation of informal linkages , such as the sharing of knowledge and experience through the regional branches of professional associations .
5 The Commissioner has already made it clear that if it needs to bring its works council proposal on where the consultation and multi-nationals through the new Chapter , it 'll include workers in British plants and calculating which firms have to comply and U K firms operating plants on the continent will have to operate the directive there .
6 The ethical positivist is likely to seek the development of three broad directions ; first , the drafting and annunciation through the UN of a comprehensive set of rules applying to the relationships between states , including where necessary cognisance of those aspects of internal affairs which are of international significance .
7 Percolation and absorption through the earth banks .
8 They have been given a confidence and liveliness through the influence of a common interpretation of Quantum Theory .
9 He made a hollow smile , the smile of the high priest and mandarin through the ages , the smile of the keeper of secrets .
10 The Nuffield Programme in Linguistics and English Teaching , directed by Professor Michael Halliday from 1964 , was publishing its findings and proposals through the Schools Council , including the influential ‘ Language in Use ’ materials ( Doughty , Pearce and Thornton , 1971 ) , and publishers like Edward Arnold and Penguin Books were offering serious general analyses of language issues for teachers .
11 Erm it 's a simple flow system , raw material comes in at one end and flows through the plant , through the machining areas , through the assembly , and the new product , the finished product comes out the end .
12 The rest of this chapter will outline the variations in deprivation and investment in the North Side and then explore the disparities between need and investment through the activities of community representatives .
13 These include qualitative inventory and associations ; quantitative structural correlations analogous to the morphological system in geomorphology ; functioning processes concentrating upon the paths followed by energy , mass and momentum through the subsystems of the planetary boundary layer , the interfaces near the earth 's surface , and the soil-plant-water systems ; physical process-response systems which link the morphological and cascading systems ; and finally physical-human process-response systems which are equivalent to the geographical control systems identified by Chorley and Kennedy ( 1971 ) .
14 refreshment and enhancement through the inspiration and motivation of community partners .
15 The aim is to develop an attitude of tolerance and openness through the study of religions .
16 The ubiquitous expression of dependence and nurturance through the essentially mandatory giving and receiving of food does not , contrary to what might be expected , significantly constrain individual autonomy , at least in part because ‘ balanced ’ reciprocity ( Sahlins 1972 ) , involving the accounting of gifts and the expectation of equivalent return , is neither expected nor , in fact , permitted within the community .
17 In his portrayed public image , Hitler was able to offer a positive pole in the Third Reich , transcending sectional interests and grievances through the overriding ideal of national unity , made possible through his necessary aloofness from the ‘ conflict sphere ’ of daily politics , separating him from the more unpopular aspects of Nazism .
18 Should this inequality be reversed , the outcome will be ambiguous , since the positive impact on w and M through the increase in Β may be outweighed by the negative impact of an increase in θ .
19 Both sides were translating foreign affairs into domestic battles and acting out the conflicts between classes and parties through the use of international substitutes .
20 Rachel meets Anab and Haleemo through the local school that their children attend , and learns of Haleemo 's other children , still stranded in Somalia .
21 He saw her knees and calves through the half-open door .
22 ‘ We do n't want any more of that lot around here , Piper , so we will forget about bagpipes and shells through the roof . ’
23 Some workers , like Hernandez-Peon ( Hernandez-Peon , Scherrer , and Velasco 1956 ) , began to explore the neural bases of attention , but their approach was tightly linked to the topic of motivation and emotion through the prevailing arousal theory that was gripping people at the time .
24 If you have ever watched a bat chase a moth , as both wing and weave through the evening air in amazing aerobatic gyrations , you will know how three-dimensional and accurate is their perception of this world .
25 They are all junior high school students , visiting Britain and Ireland through the ‘ Citizen Ambassador ’ programme run by People to People International .
26 The Conservatives have been in control of Hereford and Worcester through the chairman 's casting vote .
27 Sometimes the Orcs ally with the Dark Elves , but they are creatures of shifting loyalties , and are equally likely to attack their erstwhile allies and rampage through the Dark Elf lands .
28 It fell on my legs and lap through the skylight , a lovely slow silver moon .
29 But the stations do demonstrate that architectural influences flowed north and south through the Americas , bending styles derived from Europe to new ends .
30 John Ebdon has always made much of astronomy 's links with the past , culminating in 1980 with the opening of The Astronomers gallery — which tells the story of the subject in light and sound through the achievements of five famous astronomers .
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