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

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1 And anything that you find you do n't know then we can perhaps go back on just the bits that you do n't know .
2 Stein said yesterday : ‘ Mr Beller told me if things were not sorted out by tomorrow the company would cease trading and I do really fear this is the end .
3 No longer frowned on by even the most traditional institutions , they can look chic and incredibly efficient .
4 No longer frowned on by even the most traditional institutions , they can look chic and incredibly efficient .
5 People not not moving out at quite the same rate of knots .
6 They do not stand up to even the briefest of scrutinies .
7 These erudite analyses and subtle experiments thus led back to precisely the point at which they had started .
8 But the information was not passed on to either the hospital or the police .
9 question , issue three C two and three er we say that in relation to two as a matter of have categorize this as a question of law we say it probably categories a question of fact because if they 're right in there analysis of law and article eighty directive , all it means is , is that there is no market outside and that the restriction is insignificant if that being so one would answer the question , is not capable as a matter of pure law of infringing article eighty five , but in the light of the discussion yesterday afternoon of course when my learned friend comes to apply for this strike out , we may have difficulty in contesting that provision it 's not , not er , a , a major part of our case that we , we would have to re-consider it and , and I did ask your Lordship erm if your Lordship would minded to find otherwise not to block out at least the possibility of application for leave to amend and of course we 'd have to make , have to consider whether we could make a proper case out of it on what we do
10 When she was feeling down , Old Mother Walsh was always going on about how the snake was slithering in our direction .
11 Both gentlemen once more glanced round to where the old lady was still staring , but now speaking to Lady Danby , whom she had detained with a hand on her arm .
12 It also masks the fact that Anglo-Saxon ‘ villages ’ probably moved about in roughly the same area from generation to generation .
13 The two entries are adjacent to each other in the body of the encyclopedia under S. Obviously , this makes sense in that different readers approaching the synoptic outline from different disciplinary perspectives will both end up in roughly the same place , but it is slightly disturbing to find that while there is a main entry for " Applied linguistics " ( which cross-refers readers to " style " ) , there is no matching entry for " Literature and linguistics " to help the reader coming from a purely literary discipline .
14 a government but all insurance companies really come up with much the same thing so I mean that 's , that 's purely for your technical information rather than anything else .
15 Exposure of these sections to dyes that are selectively taken up by either the bodies of neurons or by their axons enables us to see the structure of the lesion site .
16 This was closed three years ago — Peter Craine , Rabbit 's vice president for marketing and sales , explains that the firm then did n't have any national language support for its MS-DOS products ; also , Unix — Rabbit 's favoured environment — had n't taken off in quite the way the firm had expected .
17 Melissa watched for a few seconds as he worked , apparently impervious to the heat , then turned back to where the others were waiting .
18 To help , just contact Sight Savers at 21 The Strand , Bromsgrove , Worcestershire B61 8AB ( tel : 0527 579226 ) or pick up a leaflet from Sound Control at 61 Jamaica Street , Glasgow G1 4NN for a sponsorship form , and then go along to either the Birmingham Town Hall on Sunday September the 20th between 2.00pm and 4.00pm , or our Scottish Music Show at the SECC in Glasgow at the same time .
19 A company often thinks that it can let space for a short term — say two or three years — and then move back in once the business climate has improved .
20 The act of giving the child a name , which accompanies the baptism , is not explicitly brought out in either the term ‘ baptism ’ or the more commonly used ‘ christening ’ , since the latter , obviously , means making a Christian of the infant .
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