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

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1 We now retrace our steps to Ponta do Sol and back up onto the road and continue along to Canhas .
2 Mitchell is amongst those who argue against Firestone and hold out for the continuing relevance of Freud 's work .
3 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 .
4 With Rex and Woodchip out of the picture and the forces of darkness set loose upon the land , how can we fail ?
5 Most people through that the four would join Rory Underwood and Simon Halliday and bow out at the top , having achieved the historic second Grand Slam .
6 " But my mistresses go home to their husbands for Christmas , and although I could stay at the Covington-Pyms and ride out with the hunt on Boxing Day morning , and call round at the Moons on my way back to cheer up poor Marie …
7 It is also a serious setback for hopes of reinstating passenger trains on the line to go beyond Redmire to Hawes and link up with the Settle-Carlisle line .
8 She had arranged to lunch with friends at the Lion d'Or at Cologny and call in to the clinic afterwards to see one or two patients .
9 He could go to Ireland and join up with the Republican Army , and carry on the fight his father … no , not his father , but the man he loved as a father … had started .
10 In fact I 'm sure they 'll beat them at the Manor and go through to the next round where hopefully we can probably play one of the big teams like — Oh , Manchester United , Newcastle or probably — Oh , I do n't know
11 WE ALL , I reckon , feel a nostalgia for the days before the First World War when we read that travel was simpler and you could go down to Victoria and light out for the Continent without bothering about a passport .
12 She saw it all as plainly as if it had been magically transported from Yorkshire and spread out on the quayside , the moors stretching away in the distance until they met the skyline .
13 The doctors told me to go back to Cambridge and carry on with the research I had just started in general relativity and cosmology .
14 Should any other fishermen ignore the warning of Hooper and sail out into the weather , they could find themselves drawn inexorably back to shore , even against the tide .
15 If it is a view you are after , then better to go to the top of the Pic du Midi than remain down on the col , for from there the prospect has for long been famous , especially to the north over the plains and , on a good day , westward to the Atlantic .
16 Quite how to choose your destination is not clear : You might set out for a holiday in Virgo and end up in the Crab Nebula .
17 Rome , unlike Avignon ( and , indeed , many other cities ) was inconveniently placed for easy relations with most of Europe and cut off from the north-west , where the papacy 's influence was strongest , by the great mountain range of the Alps .
18 If you can help please telephone DAD on Darlington or call in at the local office at the Friends Meeting House , 6 Skinnergate , Darlington .
19 Head towards Gennargentu and look down over the vast , untamed terrain where sheep graze among herbs and shrubs .
20 The last act before the battle was the same for all , from the Czar , Kutusov and Weirother down to the humblest man in the ranks .
21 Darlington choir the Carol Andrews Singers have won the adult section of the BBC Sainsbury Choir of the Year Contest at the Tyne Theatre , in Newcastle and go through to the next stage in Manchester this October .
22 Transfer to Kaprun and check in at the hotel .
23 Picture them , Tabitha Jute and Marco Metz , as they walk out across the spaceport tarmac this chilly Schiaparelli evening , to climb aboard the not-quite-redeemed Alice and take off into the Martian sky , bound on a journey that will take them to Plenty — and far , far beyond .
24 ‘ You fly back to Berlin and get on with the preparations .
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