Example sentences of "be [adv] [prep] each other " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | She pays £12.50 a week for a one room flat , so the couple are constantly in each other 's company . |
2 | Their hands are not inside each other 's clothes |
3 | We 're just into each other getting our act together . ’ |
4 | I see some of these big photo-ops , the Berlin Wall , revolution in Prague — I did n't think would come out , but I 'll talk about it — I just see that it 's a manipulation of the press ; photographers all know to stay in one spot so we 're not in each other 's shot . |
5 | But we 're not in each other 's pockets the whole time . |
6 | What kind of life are we going to have together if we 're forever at each other 's throats ? ’ |
7 | Apart from the evidence of reduced sexual interest in familiar members of the opposite sex , which I have already mentioned , the great mass of data shows that freely chosen human spouses are more like each other than would be expected on a chance basis . |
8 | It allows them to promote the false claim that the blacks are not fit to run South Africa when clearly they are still at each other 's throats . |
9 | Well that 's it , it might lead to better things might n't it , I say it might do them good to be away from each other for a week any way , might n't it ? |
10 | Here were two people clearly in love with each other , hating to be apart from each other and yet with the brick wall of Rosemary 's upbringing between them . |
11 | Not only did the one-second pulses appear to be closer to each other , but the humps and dips of each of those pulses — they too were closer to each other . |
12 | The entire spectrum of political parties are virtually at each other 's throats to claim the legacy of ‘ Romania 's greatest national hero ’ . |
13 | Says a pal : ‘ They were all over each other like a pair of love-struck teenagers . ’ |
14 | ‘ You were all over each other on Monday morning . ’ |
15 | Above : ‘ My parents were always in each other 's arms . |
16 | Perceiving that fascism and communism were more like each other , by 1945 , than either was like the civilisation of the West is an instance of achieved simplicity , and one that Waugh and Orwell independently shared . |
17 | It was very late when they finally had the meal that Felipe had ordered , and they were still in each other 's arms , talking and planning , when dawn began to break . |
18 | Of course native Siberians sometimes fought among themselves , just as the various national and religious communities of Europe were often at each other 's throats . |
19 | He and Pilger were now at each other 's throats , with the showdown already on the horizon — the dummy edition of Sunday 7 December . |
20 | Dorothy 's journal makes it clear that the three friends were now in each other 's company almost daily . |
21 | Not long after that they were back in each other 's arms . |
22 | From the 520's onwards , however , the Merovingians were regularly at each other 's throats ; Theuderic I attempted to murder his half-brother Chlothar I ; Chlothar and Childebert I did kill the sons of Chlodomer ; Childebert and Theuderic 's son Theudebert I almost fought against Chlothar , but a storm miraculously prevented a battle taking place . |
23 | They were virtually in each other 's arms . |
24 | Mother and daughter were very like each other , tall , dark , slim , pleasant-looking women with mid-brown curly hair and slightly snub noses . |
25 | We 'd never been apart from each other for more than two weeks when I was arrested . |
26 | They are apart from each other and part of each other . |
27 | ‘ Their pride is not for each other , it 's for themselves . |
28 | Barrier reefs and atolls are very like each other in general form and zonation . |
29 | Yet in everything that really mattered , their concern was always for each other — and of course the children . |