Example sentences of "be [adv] [adj] [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 For instance , there are only 17 out of the 69 Mathematics statements of attainment for Levels 1 to 3 .
2 Despite this , receptionists are usually low down in the formal organisational structure .
3 I assume Keegan and Francis are also well up in the betting .
4 You will get better help if you have outlines and ideas for the supervisor to react to ; experiment with your ideas and see what reactions you get , rather than waiting to produce ideas that you are sure fit in with an established approach .
5 Below about a thousand metres oxygen concentrations are fairly static down to the a minimum between five hundred and a thousand metres depth so they 're fairly static .
6 I 'm literally wet through in the night , I was !
7 Can I can I say that I after coffee I 'd like to go through each of these criteria and try to distinguish those which are relevant at structure plan level and those which may be more applicable down at the district local plan level .
8 And one of you I 'm particularly disappointed in at the moment , I do n't want to name any names because I do n't think it 's right to embarrass her in front of the others ,
9 A common fault is that the roof space is not effectively isolated from its neighbours — the party wall must be fully complete up to the rafters and roof tiles so that no smoke can penetrate it .
10 I 'm quite well out from the ladder because it s at an angle and there in front of me is the wardrobe .
11 Whether he can still achieve that goal will be very much down to the obstinacy and determination for which he is famous .
12 Adhesive circles and lines are available on a reel and these are simply stuck down onto the film as required .
13 Nowadays women carried everything short of CS gas ; all of them — at least , all of the women Elinor knew — were fairly well up on the - martial arts .
14 Things were relatively quiet down in the car park .
15 Competition techniques are pretty much down to the individual himself .
16 ‘ It 's much better out of a bottle , ’ says a character in The Chalk Garden ( 1956 ) to a servant preparing the salad dressing , encapsulating the post-war world of anti-sensuality in which the gourmets began at Calais .
17 Yes , the benefit is only payable up to the age of sixty .
18 , by the time I get my Best is so late on in the , in the sort of time , see I wo n't get that one until Sunday .
19 I think what 's happened the moon is is either set already or it 's so low down in the sky we ca n't see it because the buildings and things are in the way .
20 That is a privileged environment , in terms of its frequency of occurrence in running usage ( and perhaps also in its psychological salience for grammarians ) but , nonetheless , it is just one out of the several adjectival constructions familiar to the ordinary user of the language .
21 I remember a few years ago a lady bought a jumper to the knitting club , displaying it proudly and saying : ‘ it 's just some out of the washing machine ’ .
22 what , what I wondered was if you can take some bleach down , I think there 's probably some down in the loo downstairs , and at least put some of that into , can you do that ?
23 The procedure to be followed in disputed actions ( whether default or fixed date actions ) is now set out in the automatic directions contained in Ord 17 , r 11(3) — ( 12 ) , subject to any further directions , given by the court ( Ord 17 , r 11(2) and ( 3 ) ) .
24 Do that and — if you can forgive the incessant roar from the tyres — progress is fairly fuss-free up to the legal limit .
25 This is the position adopted , for example , by Nordberg ( 1980 : 5 ) , and is plainly correct up to a point .
26 A further extension through this horizon is then possible up to the next surface on which or at which the space-time again splits into two separating gravitational waves which are the time reverse of the initial approaching waves .
27 Miss J. has pretty well run him and now he 's doing a roaring trade and has just married a daughter of Lord Lytton , he 's evidently right in with the right lot of people … and what a God 's mercy that for once in a way these people have got hold of the right man and what a thing for England . ’
28 Whether the patients enjoy life after a myocardial infarct is very much up to the people who look after them at home or in hospital .
29 Most of the bureau do n't supply order forms — most of their work comes in on spec — and so it is very much up to the customer to specify what is required .
30 The land-based multi-warhead er missiles is a real issue that has to be tackled , er and they may either go for , this is very much up in the air , go for er distinct cuts in er Start one , or they may talk about limitations and then go for a Start two treaty .
  Next page