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

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1 Very soon , they eat enough to pass on to the next stage of their life cycle .
2 The architect , Bogdan Bogdanovic , whose entire career has been devoted to the tragic commemoration of war victims , is one of the very few Serbians brave enough to speak out against the current Serbian aggression .
3 Some MEPs want ultimately to take over from the council the main responsibility for passing EC laws , while others want to concentrate on the right to appoint the European Commission .
4 I cough again looking down at the tile floor of the room .
5 Research recently carried out by the Medical Research Council in Cardiff involved 2,033 men under 70 who had suffered a heart attack .
6 " Somehow I do n't think they look right planted out in the ground when you 've only a small space to use , " explains Tricia .
7 Also , the jets of material associated with them seem certainly to shoot out from the rotational poles and to keep travelling that way ; were new planets to engage in the game of cosmic billiards they would have to shoot out equatorially from their ‘ parents ’ .
8 You know just look up in the dictionary
9 And you know in one week , but I 'm quite willing you know just to get on with the handicraft , but I just ca n't be committed .
10 While some associated with it tend to pose in sunglasses or growl into walkie-talkies and get totally caught up in the three-day whirl that has nothing to do with the real world , the contest , over the years , has given joy , drama and emotion .
11 I damn near fell out of the chair and looked at John and go like that and John went like that … it was really quite amusing .
12 ‘ They damn near went up with the balloon , ’ he said .
13 I get really fed up with the whole
14 You know never gets up in the mornings ?
15 Mr Clarke revealed the fresh job losses when he addressed the annual conference of the breakaway Union of Democratic Mineworkers in Weymouth , where he faced angry questions from delegates who feel badly let down by the corporation .
16 Fortunately , many of them know that their relatives and friends will be calling in to see them from time to time ; but ‘ from time to time ’ does not take care of those long days and nights in between , when , apart from their often desperate need for company , they feel frighteningly cut off from the world of people who would come to their aid at once if they fell ill , if only they had the means of contacting them .
17 The vines are greedy — hardy , and they push deep roots down into the soil , but they are also vulnerable .
18 They keep on going on in the negative sense and the bulldozing here , has got you digging a big hole , and you eventually fall into it .
19 Even though the ball is further back in your stance , try not to chop down into the ball .
20 Captain David Lloyd-Owen 's LRDG patrol also turned up at the rendezvous and he recalls his first meeting with him .
21 Too late in the day because all the hotels are full and I end up tramping round in the dark , lugging my pack and money ( cash , a great wad of hard currency ) , nervous of the hatchet-faced youths who watch me meandering round , concentrating so intently on making it look as though I know exactly where I 'm heading that I soon have no idea where I am on the mapless streets of Algiers .
22 I get head spin , and end up lolling out of the car , dribbling through my nose onto the tarmac just to get the vile bitter taste of nicotine out of my mouth .
23 The uppers , though , curl around grow up through the skin of the nose and , still curling , turn back towards the animal 's forehead .
24 ( A couple of drunks do eventually square up in the third base bleachers , but by Stamford Bridge standards it is almost a mating ritual ) .
25 For organizations and clubs first timing it in this area Kinloss Canoe Club can always provide an experienced canoeist guide ( usually an instructor ) to join your flotilla and paddle along to give up to the minute on the spot information , or if you wish , to lead on the water , all at not cost , especially on the Findhorn .
26 I think was er er erm Mr Thomas , and I think perhaps hinted on by the Senior Inspector as well , er what is , what is Greater York ? to do with Sylvia , erm
27 One of the few times you will find big bream in waters which do not match up to the points I have mentioned is when they are the result of a recent stocking operation .
28 You can not expect to be asked the questions exactly as they appear here and you will be badly thrown if you have programmed yourself with exact responses to very particular questions which do not crop up in the way you had anticipated .
29 Just as they are taught other subjects , they should increasingly be taught about such topics as mental handicap so that they do not grow up with the prejudices that their parents may possess .
30 I was certainly happy to make this find as the larger hammered silver coins of this period are not common and certainly do not pour out of the ground no matter where you live .
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