Example sentences of "[noun] [conj] [vb base] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 They are particularly concerned that the poor , elderly and sick will be forced to run up debts or cut down on the amount of electricity , coal , oil and gas they use .
2 He would linger on those delivery trips and stay for dinner or tea or come back via the Talbot , the pub across the road , although he was under age .
3 Essentially this new regulation , or reregulation as it has become known , is the supervision of conflicts of interest and other risks that arise out of the process of deregulation .
4 Two other intrinsic methods of measuring K are worth discussing as they are methods that carry through to the analysis of space time curvature in Chapter 7 .
5 TIES emblazoned with Santas and Rudolphs with red noses that light up at the touch of a button and seductive pictures of Marilyn Monroe are all part of Tie Rack 's campaign strategy for Christmas .
6 The sun stirs up the winds ; the winds suck up the swells ; the swells pump out waves that trip up against the jutting kerbs of the land .
7 The most lethal amphibian venom of all is secreted by tiny arrow-poison frogs that clamber about in the leaves littering the floor of the South American rain forests .
8 Luke moved through a doorway that lead off from the right of the hallway and disappeared from view .
9 such a vertical representation tells us nothing about the relationships that go on between the centre and field offices .
10 The capes are famous for a confused and ugly swell , and peculiar lumps of wind that crash down from the coastal peaks of the Taurus Mountains .
11 The main access is via steps that drop down from the street between walls that tend to increase visual tension .
12 When the leader , a young man in his early twenties , saw that his Sturmabteilungen were in place , he walked towards the steps that lead up to the grand entrance .
13 One of the young men at the rear of the little procession tugged at his rein and made to wheel and ride out of the wood .
14 In principle , they can fix their financial risks and get on with the job of dealing with the commercial ones .
15 Leave the Museum of Decorative Arts and walk along to the Svatopluka Čech Bridge of 1906 , by J. Soukup and J. Koula .
16 We now retrace our steps to Ponta do Sol and back up onto the road and continue along to Canhas .
17 Slice fungi and fry down with the butter and onions until all the liquid has evaporated .
18 As the shadows lengthen , the men can be seen standing around with a pint of beer in hand , while mothers keep watchful eyes on the kids and catch up on the latest gossip .
19 ‘ We should get six top international players and a number of international referees and sit down with the law-makers so that all points of view are aired . ’
20 Turn left into Bleak Terrace and go back onto the Fell through the wicket gate to the village boundary wall .
21 It 's not often you score 3 goals and end up on the losing team .
22 It 's not often you score 3 goals and end up on the losing team .
23 Mitchell is amongst those who argue against Firestone and hold out for the continuing relevance of Freud 's work .
24 I wrench the steering-wheel back from uncertainty and thrash on up the hill .
25 We did n't so much run as squelch , slosh and slither up to the marching camp with the electric storm raging about us .
26 I finish my tea and climb back into the Toyota .
27 Some might well be Balliol supporters and go along with the Earl for that reason .
28 Consultants say most children with cancer have a good chance of recovery , but this new service , costing £750,000 a year , aims to improve treatment and research and cut down on the time spent on the ward .
29 We dress up like bit-part players in an epic on Scott and go out into the night where the air bites clean and deep , and the snow crunches in that beautiful cold way .
30 You hurriedly get out of your car and go round to the rear .
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