Example sentences of "[adv] [adv] [prep] [noun] [adv] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | There was no doubt that right-winger Albert Harry played much better with Billy there beside him and , under Turner 's neat and shrewd direction , our forwards became quite devastating . |
2 | A noisy , colourful barbecue atmosphere would , in fact , seem somewhat out of place here in this green oasis with its feeling of calm and utter privacy , lovingly created by Tricia . |
3 | Azharuddin , so out of touch earlier in the tour , now came to the fore , stroking his wristy way to 106 , his 11th Test century . |
4 | He looked at the hillside across the river , where the moving masses had halted , still just out of range even for the most expert , to redress their line . |
5 | And they were nervous , not quite at ease yet in their new clothes . |
6 | Interest in the Russian and Slavonic languages is once again at peak here in Nottingham as their former communist countries undergo massive change . |
7 | This in itself was unusual , as the high-ranking patrons would have been expected to display classical scenes in their houses , leading to the supposition that these intimate portraits of courtesans were most probably on view only in the private apartments . |
8 | But the battle to preserve beloved solitudes flared up repeatedly in patches all over the country , precisely as it does today with the threat of new airfields and military training areas . |
9 | Local changes can be detected from employment , taxation and social security records and also Executive Councils ' lists of general practitioners ' patients ( though these are notoriously out of date especially for age groups having little need of medical care and therefore slow to register with a new GP after moving ) . |
10 | Well whether she never saw her indicating or owt but she pulled straight out at end straight into her crushed her legs . |
11 | These stresses and strains emerge just as forcibly in studies specifically of the supporters of the elderly mentally infirm . |
12 | I 'm sure you 'd be far more at home somewhere on the high seas with a scarf around your head and a cutlass at your belt . ’ |
13 | The impoverished areas that black Britons settle in means that young people are far more at risk both in terms of levels of offending , and in terms of police surveillance . |
14 | A distant clock in Maryhill to his left began to chime and was answered by another , far off in Springburn away beyond the football ground and the timber basin . |
15 | Because of the recession , there is a prospect that more of that money will flow back out of Washington afterwards in refunds to taxpayers who did not do as well as in the past . |
16 | Black will take it swinging it in flicked on by Rozario and the goalkeeper made up for er what might have been an error a moment or two ago by coming bravely in with Pearce right in front of him and Rozario I mean on the flick . |
17 | The King had been so glum on his arrival and then , suddenly , almost out of character even for him , his mood had changed to one of enjoyment , drinking deeply , boasting that he would be with the Queen before the night was out , then off riding into that terrible storm to his death on the top of Kinghorn Cliff . |
18 | The conference had been postponed at least twice since November reportedly for " logistical reasons " . |
19 | Well a little closer to home now for the rest of the sport in our roundup . |
20 | Altogether , she had the kind of gloss normally associated with models and film stars , and it seemed oddly out of place here in her aunt 's elegant sitting-room . |
21 | , A lake next to Trawsfynydd nuclear power station in Wales has a higher level of radioactivity than anywhere else in Britain apart from Sellafield , according to a report from Nuclear Electric ( previously the Central Electricity Generating Board ) . |