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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 sit down again the lot of you .
2 May I als also ask her to bear in mind that none of us are in a great hurry to go through again the expense and the dislocation of the relocation of the British Library , and if this land is not made available to the Library , that might happen rather sooner than we wish .
3 For a long time she lay , wide-eyed in the darkness , living over again the strange events of the day , until these thoughts and impressions gradually merged into dreams .
4 Surely Baldwin , whatever his desire earlier in the imbroglio , can not at this stage have wished to go back to the Cabinet on the following morning and announce that a wayward King , who had already compromised his position with most opinion both at home and in the Dominions , had suddenly changed his mind , at least temporarily , and , having attracted the maximum publicity to his preference for Mrs Simpson over the Throne , was now prepared to ditch her and try to pick up again the pieces of kingship .
5 The accounting implications of generic strategies , however , go far beyond this , but , before addressing them , it is appropriate here to pick up again the ROI debate left uncompleted in chapter 3 .
6 Rose Hilaire had a waking dream , one which followed her into sleep and came out again the other side to stay with her all day , going with her into Belmodes side by side like a fellow worker .
7 The pair of them teamed up again the following season when Moss also joined the German manufacturer .
8 Anthony started to translate this , out of an inability to do anything else with it , and when he turned round again the waiter had disappeared .
9 Charles was just getting out of his bath and was about to put on again the same clothes he had taken off beforehand , when suddenly , there at the gates were envoys bringing from Aquitaine a crown and all the royal gear , and everything needed for holy rites !
10 In which Saint Bob takes up again the slings and arrows of an outrageous career — and turns in a halfway decent record .
11 We want to point out again the difficulty of drawing up regional strategic guidance in the absence of a stated national coastal strategy .
12 ‘ A suspension controller malfunctioned and once that was fixed and I got out again the car caught fire when an oil cooler failed .
13 3.10 To see how , we must now take up again the question , Why can some adjectives occur in prenominal attributive position but not postnominally ?
14 He decided he was n't going to get anywhere along those lines , or not yet , and went over again the details of when Hawick had last seen his fiancée .
15 An hour or so was spent drafting a new outline for this second approach on the mysteries of the Coniunctio and , when she was satisfied that its thread was strong enough to guide her through the maze , she took up again the pursuit of Mercurius through the bridal-chambers of the mind .
16 ’ When he looked up again the screen was dark .
17 But when he looked up again the mask had hidden any inner reaction , and she realised how skilled he was in covering up his emotions .
18 Long years of poverty had filled those words with a special resonance ; to use them now brought out again the risk-all abandon of those times , before responsibility had taught her caution .
19 With our minds clearly on strategy formulation , we shall then pick up again the debate about return on investment ( ROI ) begun in chapter 3 , but put aside until a better understanding of ‘ strategic fit ’ had been developed in chapter 4 .
20 " I hear there 's a rumour going around Manhattan that they had to close down again the day after you shopped there because they 'd run out of Paris fashions ; is that true ? "
21 Thus it was not surprising that the initiative to take up again the idea of a common market , first raised back in 1952 by the Netherlands at a ministerial meeting of the ECSC as a way of combatting the limited effectiveness of both the OEEC and the sectoral approach , as well as Monnet 's arguments for cooperation in nuclear energy , were grasped only by the six countries of little Europe .
22 okay , round the base of your thumb , basically what we want to do is we want to clamp these fingers in so they ca n't come un unstuck , we want to push them together because she ca n't keep them shut like that , but the next thing is that you come round to the back where the little finger is , the next time you come round here , you 're gon na come round to about the first thumb joint okay and then you 're gon na go over the top okay and if you come round again the little thumb , by , by the little finger , you come round again to the thumb joint okay , come over the top again , round , we 're just making really like the figure of eight , but all the time we 're keeping off of this wrist here and I 'm keeping her fingers in , are you alright still ?
23 The Bike Sub-Committee was still being urged to proceed , yet a month later the subject was adjourned , only to be urged on again the month following — ‘ so long as it had a corrugated iron roof ’ , presumably a financial stringency to keep the cost down to £15 .
24 There were enough fragments of limestone and specklings of dust to prove over again the use to which the stone had been put .
25 Overnight , the fighting calmed down a little but it picked up again the next morning and raged on throughout the day .
  Next page