Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [det] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It hit sectors and people who largely escaped before , the skilled , the clerical workers , the managers and the professionals who 've been badly mauled this time , and where last time around er the service sector was expanding to mop up some of those who 'd lost their jobs in manufacturing , this time the service sector too has been in deep trouble .
2 Do you really want to carry on using that mug ?
3 Many have made only one short field trip and yet they go on using that material in articles and even books for the rest of their lives .
4 And she came to Whitfield , and she said Mr Whitfield , why is it that you keep on preaching on this , and you keep on using this text , and keep on saying you must be born again ?
5 But there were times when he had to hold his tongue , if only to ensure that he could keep on using this fool for his own ends .
6 They have thereby developed few class allegiances and few commitments to large-scale theories about how society is , or should be , organised .
7 However , I suspect that Mains rather got some enjoyment out of appearing as some grim nemesis of the south .
8 It is in snowy weather that owners of buildings roofed in this way most regret this form of construction because wind-blown powdery snow easily enters narrow chinks in the roof surface , and where there is no underslating felt ( as applies in most old constructions ) , the snow settles between the ceiling joists , later melting and saturating ceilings and other internal finishes .
9 For if you are not exercising aerobically using some form of whole body continuous movement ( brisk walking , jogging , cycling ) for 30 minutes at least three to four times a week , then by definition , you are sedentary .
10 ‘ We are slowly realising that fat is a very effective means of making you put on weight .
11 It 's going on raining all night , I 'm certain of that , but we can feed underground here , you know .
12 Clovers helped remove the fallow stage from cultivation , effectively bringing more land into use — as in the ‘ Norfolk Four Course ’ ( wheat , turnips , barley , and clover ) advocated but not invented by Viscount Townshend of Raynham ( ‘ Turnip ’ Townshend , 1674–1738 ) .
13 My final point relates to the penalties that will be employed when North sea workers are eventually given some sort of legislative protection against victimisation .
14 Elsewhere , despite disturbance , some young are successfully reared each year , and Ringed Plovers seem to be developing an increasing tolerance of casual disturbance by man of their breeding sites .
15 Thru enacts this strategy of ‘ wild jay-walking ’ between theories by side-stepping their systematicity and making them into stories .
16 I have rarely heard such stability and depth of image from a moving-coil loudspeaker and these are factors which applied , moreover , across a remarkably wide listening area .
17 For Assiter , fantasy is not just a harmless and essentially solitary activity in which everyone engages to a greater or lesser extent , but is something which also has an effect on the way people behave towards others , and on the way they may feel they can justifiably treat each other , particularly women .
18 The debtor goes on to borrow more money , and the question is whether that is taken to be included in the legacy too .
19 The Report expresses the hope that the implementation of the Fourth Company Law Directive on accounts [ see page 39 ] will eventually make this task easier .
20 If they went on seeing each other , would they not eventually produce the same complicatedly beautiful pattern of commitment as her friends had ?
21 ‘ Because we need to clear the air , I think , if we 're to go on seeing each other . ’
22 Mills and Boon , however , rigorously deny any charge of producing ‘ formula fiction ’ ; their instructions to potential authors , as they insist , and as some critics have noted with surprise , add up to little more than an encouragement to ‘ freshness and originality of approach ’ .
23 She could still hear the faint murmurs of Tom Russell and his sister talking on the veranda , and it distracted her from the real purpose of this time alone , which was not to go on reliving that moment when his hand had covered her own , but to obediently follow his suggestion of giving herself time to fully think this through .
24 In theory , one bile acid molecule could recycle several times , thereby generating several HCO 3 - ions in the canaliculus , and this would explain the ‘ hyper ’ choleresis .
25 Rational people will predict them and thereby annul any effect they might have on real variables .
26 Then it was on to see another side of Craigmillar — a refurbished district council flat occupied by Sheila and Gerald Robinson .
27 By analogy with the genetic information raining down on the canal from my willow tree , we could say that the dust carries ‘ instructions ’ for how to dam streams and eventually make more dust .
28 A little goes that way and then a very small amount goes that way .
29 When you come out of prison you need somewhere to go that day , ’ he said .
30 want something to do … somewhere to go this weekend … there 's plenty of choice …
  Next page