Example sentences of "[coord] [adv prt] [conj] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 If the court dismisses the application , it must make an order authorising the creditor to present a bankruptcy petition either forthwith or on or after a specified date .
2 ( 6 ) In this section — " disposition " has the same meaning as in the Law of Property Act 1925 ; " interest in land " means any estate , interest or charge in or over land or in or over the proceeds of sale of land .
3 ( 6 ) In subsection ( 5 ) above — " disposition " and " purchaser " have the same meanings as in the Law of Property Act 1925 ; and " interest in land " means any estate , interest or charge in or over land or in or over the proceeds of sale of land .
4 There are also research organisations sited either on the King 's Buildings campus or in and around Edinburgh with which the Faculty has very close working relations .
5 Repayment started in 1946 , initially only to men aged 65 or over and to women aged 60 or over , but the conditions for claiming varied over the years until 1972 when it was announced that there would be a ‘ general release ’ and that all credits were to be repaid without any further restrictions .
6 In a letter to regional advisers and postgraduate deans in 1988 the chairman of the Joint Committee on Higher Surgical Training stated that trainees aged 35 or over and without the requisite ‘ papers ’ should be told they are unlikely to succeed in finding a senior registrar post .
7 any accident covered by or through or in connection with any motor£ vehicle .
8 The Corporation will indemnify the Policyholder in the event of an accident caused by or through or in connection with any Caravan described in the Schedule and the fixed site on which such Caravan is situated together with any fences hedges posts or chains in relation thereto against liability at law for damages and claimants costs and expenses in respect of
9 Nothing that would stand looking at too closely , of course , but it was like all the best illusions that she 'd ever seen , onstage or off because for all its contrivance , in the moment of perception it somehow transcended reality .
10 I do n't suppose you 'd er get that sort of relationship nowadays and of course it was during the war when people er the fact that erm there was a war on erm was a levelling down or up or at least a levelling of , of people 's situations they ,
11 When moved , it gives a perceptibly false sense of movement , as if tracking in or out but without the change of perspective that would accompany a genuine movement .
12 As Schwab ( 1964 ) has pointed out , one of the features of Plato 's scheme is that it does not primarily classify knowledge in terms of what it is of or about but in terms of its quality — its degrees of reality .
13 In other words the old offences under ( f ) and ( g ) above now apply to eight or more seated motor cars or goods vehicles 3,500 kg or under and to the other categories of vehicle not mentioned here .
14 Half gave age limits of 35 or under and in the private sector most gave age preferences .
15 Between the 4th and 15th and on or near the 27th you may face some extraordinary turns of events .
16 And on and off a shower or two of white arrows , when I thought I needed them . ’
17 On and on and on for ever , with no way out — ‘
18 Or does it go on and on and on and on ?
19 The debate should not endlessly be about tactics , it becomes self-defeating to go on and on and on wrangling about tactics when it is the motivation behind those tactics that holds the key .
20 And on and on it goes .
21 Do you like the sound of your own voice so much you have to go on and on and on today ?
22 they seem to be going on and on and on
23 When , when Pat and Ann was at Notre Dame , Pat used to sell , tell stuff oh and they went on and on and on
24 My Lords , I hope that I can er erm allay the disquiet of the Noble Lord , Lord erm the , th th the fact is that British Transport Police at the moment have control and jurisdiction over all the the railway system in and on and in the vicinity of the , the railway the railway organisation .
25 The high blue summer weather goes on and on and by mid-afternoon it 's hot up here under the leads .
26 ‘ Your emotions go up and down but by the end of the trial our hopes were really up .
27 We travelled up and down and across Britain .
28 He looked me up and down and with a twinkle in his eye said ‘ Oh ! dear , I think I shall have to let you know after all . ’
29 It was up and down and around corners a bit , and it was a nice ride and er and er views of Oxfordshire that nobody has seen before the road came , and you wo n't have that amount of time to look at them ever again , because you 'll be doing seventy instead of seven miles an hour .
30 Loosen up facial muscles by stretching your whole face and trying to move the muscles up and down and from side to side .
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