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

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1 The down-to-earth Hoffman and the ethereal Farrow got on reasonably well during the shooting .
2 Our children had in , they went to schools here , and what with the friends , and neighbours and former schoolfriends we got on wonderfully well with the general public .
3 Maybe that very quickly he started coming up with lyrics and that he and I got on well right from the off , Well , not quite from the off .
4 In both cases , their separate experience may well have created a special atmosphere , although my informants all stressed that they got on perfectly well with the men at work .
5 Murdock stayed in Cornwall for about 19 years and got on much better with the miners than Watt had done .
6 He got on very well with the patients , and made them laugh without taking umbrage when they laughed at him .
7 and of course , as I say , being at Cambridge there was a little theatre there and er we used to see so many of the actors and actresses that used to come into our lives you see because there were five places on the station , for instance , there was the tea room adjoining the , there was a large kiosk , large kiosk one girl in there , you see , and er there was , then there was this large which is the biggest and then the dining room that , you see and er so and , and one year I , I wrote it down but erm , one year I remember we took forty four thousand pounds which was a lot of money and er , you see , well er I got on very well with the girls
8 catching on reasonably well for the time of the year ?
9 While this date fits in reasonably well with the tradition about Seyyid Serif and Molla Fenari , Tritton 's identification of the scholar mentioned by Ibn Hajar with Cemaleddin Aksarayi is open to question .
10 The post-war hexagonal library fits in well enough with the street .
11 The discovery of a feedback mechanism which enhances the pulse of these cycles therefore fits in very well with the developing consensus on the cause of Ice Ages .
12 ‘ All right , fellows , ’ he said , ‘ kneel down right here on the floor . ’
13 This category , in contrast with the business salariat , owes its existence to the social democratic expansion of state services under the sign of an ideology of state-sponsored social improvement , and is therefore less likely to subscribe wholeheartedly to the traditional middle class values of personal independence and responsibility , or to go along so readily with the middle class complaints against ‘ wasteful state spending ’ and ‘ excessive taxation ’ .
14 Faldo said : ‘ When you are my height you have a tendency to go down too far on the ball and that is what I was doing .
15 The only place where this type of sedimentation seems to be going on at the present day is in the ocean depths , where the deposits consist mainly of the remains of minute pelagic organisms , literally raining down from a watery heaven , plus volcanic dust raining down more intermittently from the aerial heaven above .
16 The relationship that had been started by the bull was being carried on very satisfactorily by the comings and goings of the kitten .
17 I wondered how you caught on so quickly to the trick of running water which will blot out all our conversation .
18 I saw a taxi driving along very slowly on the other side of the road from our friends .
19 This role may have been rather a disappointment to both sides , as General Gallagher said when he got back from Hanoi , although by opposing the clearance of wartime US mines that had been laid in Haiphong harbour , thus preventing an early return of French troopships , Gallagher seems to have come down rather heavily on the Vietminh side .
20 Each time pressing down very firmly on the backing sheet , hammer nails into the other two sides .
21 No one has yet solved the problem of what to do with it — turning it into glass chips is the latest idea , but engineers have to wait between 30 and 50 years until the waste has cooled down sufficiently enough for the process to take place .
22 From 1940 political activity was damped down not only by the maintenance of the electoral truce but also by a suspension of local government elections .
23 The Brigadier had at last found an appreciative audience , and he and the Marshal bounced along together comfortably in the jeep with the Captain and Bacci following in a car .
24 Every election , some people discover that they are unregistered , and in most cases it is because they either forgot to fill in the form , or they moved in too late in the year to qualify .
25 Instead , she went over to the window and stared out at the bright flowers , the trees , the green of the grass and the hills that rose up gently all around the house .
26 The Sunday Telegraph ( February 1961 ) cashed in on the rapidly expanding quality Sunday market , built up most effectively by the Sunday Times ( whose colour magazine started in the same year ) .
27 Except for Britain and France this type of banking became prevalent in continental Europe during the buoyant expansion of capitalism since the 1880s and close relationships between industrial companies and banks built up everywhere basically on the same lines , even though their evolution proceeded rather differently in different countries .
28 We would be expecting to double last week 's figures , because it 's picked up so dramatically in the last couple of days .
29 But the good mews petered out rapidly especially in the back row where O'Hara was the only one to come through a game against Old Wesley in Dublin .
30 I quickly cast back out again to the same spot and to my total astonishment the rod was almost pulled out of my hands before I got it back to the rests .
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