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

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1 Suddenly it 's all there , complete with toilet paper , which you use and then deftly wind back on to the roll .
2 Periodically the ship had literally sailed up on to the tug , ramming her bows against the stern , and finally the towing hawser had ripped out the capstan to which it was fastened .
3 Thus far The Buddha of Suburbia is autobiographical : thereafter Karim and Hanif go their separate ways , only getting back on to the same tracks when they both flee north of the river to west London .
4 Then Edgley found an unplayable lie off the tee ; James could only hack out on to the fairway and Dorset lost the hole to a five .
5 a car behind me , the car behind that just pulled out on to the wrong side of the road , sat there looking and decided not to and pulled back
6 She began to pace about and finally went out on to the balcony to watch the mountains and try to take her mind off a pain that she was sure would keep her awake all night .
7 ‘ I know how much we have already put in up to the end of 1992 and I know what we could be asked for for 1993 , ’ Longuet said , but the size of the sums is to embarrassing for him to reveal them — but he did say they were incompatible with what the European Commission would allow and what French taxpayers wanted .
8 Very , very slow moving there indeed , and it 's going very very slowly heading out on to the A40 .
9 ‘ Your brothers wo n't be back until tomorrow , ’ her father replied , still staring out on to the street .
10 You can still cut back over to the to about there .
11 On other JAR matters , the Library staff restructuring has pushed a lot more work down on to the front desk staff , and I 'm sure that the effects will be noticed in future .
12 Pain Teens open up in a cloud of dry ice that fills the stage and eventually leaks out on to the dance floor .
13 She also went up on to the stage afterwards to meet the singers , and endeared herself to them all when one of the chorus asked , ‘ Why do n't you come and audition for the company ? ’
14 That was attached to for the July Course the Jockey Club runs a long way right near round on to the Swaffham Road , yeah see runs right up , right up to the Swaffham Road , you see .
15 Hector , who had been whining all the while , now crept back on to the bed and pushed his nose under the veined hand resting on the coverlet .
16 Simon had put Ben onto his lead so that he did n't run back down to the beach and cut himself on the rusty barbed wire .
17 Do n't go up on to the roof yourself unless you are very confident — and your insurance policy covers you !
18 But police said children had ignored them and even as rescue workers left the scene they had to warn two more boys who were about to go out on to the ice .
19 There was a thump as the lorry hit the bank , heeled over , and then bounced back on to the lane .
20 In the 1970s and 1980s , left-wing guerrilla groups moved into the cities , trained teenagers in the use of weapons and were then pushed back in to the countryside by the army .
21 You go up to the top , then ski back down to the bottom .
22 He wrapped this and the fat-soaked bread in sheets of clean newspaper taken from the bathroom , then climbed back on to the stool to see what else he could find .
23 If you want a view altogether grimmer and more inhuman than the one you have just relished in the easeful valley of Lescun , then drive on up to the top of the Col du Somport .
24 Course creeps out up to the steps , look out the shelter oh the factory 's still here anyway .
25 A powerful splash beside her told her Guy had dived in too , scything rapidly out towards the moored ketch then arcing back round to the shore in that stylish front crawl .
26 The Warlord toppled backwards — slowly at first , then avalanching down on to the vitrodur surface .
27 As an afterthought , Ellwood emptied the priest 's pockets , then scrambled back on to the rock and pushed Carey 's belongings in between the boulders along with his own clothing .
28 And when Victoria put her hand over her mouth and almost fell down on to the couch she said , and with some indignation , ‘ You find it funny , Gran ? ’
29 C'zinsit bounced out of the saddle , touched the ground with his feet , then vaulted up on to the mare 's back again .
30 When I went to find her , however , I discovered she had gone right to the top of the house to talk to Heathcliff through his locked bedroom door , and had then climbed out on to the roof and in through his window .
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