Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | And he went on gazing out of the window , drawing on it with his finger until Mrs Hollins came out and rapped on the glass . |
2 | And he goes on gazing out of the window . |
3 | As Speaker O'Neill forcibly pointed out to the newly elected President Carter , tactics that had worked in the relatively sedate politics of Georgia were unlikely to be effective in Washington . |
4 | Stay in this position for some time , then slowly sit up through a curved spine — a great way to relax ! |
5 | And , yes , I saw the incident at Southampton , where Mark Nicholas was eventually given out to a disputed close catch and then brought back to the crease . |
6 | SHe had eventually given in to a desire to seek Tammuz out , even though SHe already recognised the signs which meant he wanted to be left alone . |
7 | Diniz also had stayed , and had found his way out into the yard , and the broken pillars of the loggia , where he had found somewhere to sit out of the wind . |
8 | The Red crew gained a length by the mile post and 2 ½ by Hammersmith Bridge , but the freshmen hung on to lose by about the same margin , six seconds behind Red Alligator 's winning time of 19min 46sec . |
9 | The man nodded and smiled all over again — rather encouragingly , this time — and then , smiling in a somewhat more valedictory sort of way , edged slowly back out through the door . |
10 | Guests are often late and rarely sit down at the table on time . |
11 | ‘ He very rarely goes out in the evenings . ’ |
12 | Slowly struggling up from the depths of deep unconsciousness , Laura flicked open her eyelids , only to shut them firmly again as she winced at the brilliant sunshine flooding in through the windows of the bedroom . |
13 | Do you remember when as a child you would stand transfixed , gazing up at the grandfather clock , with your little heart beating faster and faster as the minute hand slowly crept up to the hour when suddenly , with magical ringing chimes it burst into life . |
14 | If you want to get in close enough to see the detail of his beautiful body markings , you wo n't be able to include much of his neck which will be mostly sticking out through the top of the frame . |
15 | On Aug. 8 the British hostage John McCarthy was released in Beirut ; he was swiftly transported to the Syrian capital , Damascus , and thence flown back to the United Kingdom . |
16 | The material being drilled is effectively broken up by the drill bit , and the rotary action of the drill bit is primarily to remove debris from the hole . |
17 | Right sit up on the chair and we 'll read the story of the jumble sale . |
18 | Activists are illegally dismissed , strikes are forcibly broken up by the army or police and many unionists have been killed . |
19 | It may paper over things and succeed in buying time , but it can not overcome the class-based conflicts that will eventually bubble up to the surface . |
20 | She added : ‘ When he eventually got on to the train he left the bird on a seat next to his cabin . |
21 | I eventually got back to the switchboard and asked for the neurosurgical bed manager . |
22 | As I have heard from his crew , he baled out when he eventually got back to the south coast of England . |
23 | The Cult of Pleasure is revealed as being secretly given over to the worship of Slaanesh . |
24 | The Foreign Secretary stressed , however , that aid on its own can never ensure reform is successfully carried through in the two countries . |
25 | George Stephen remembered how as a youth he heard ‘ many a semi-domestic debate as to the extent to which parliamentary manoeuvring could be successfully carried out with the ministerial benches ’ . |
26 | Again , many decisions which are successfully carried out in a given period may not turn out to have been the best possible courses of action . |
27 | In the 1990s there was only the hope that her fires , so vigorously stoked up by the dispossessed , would begin to burn down of their own accord . |
28 | It leaves me like a right fool out in the bloody open . ’ |
29 | The other end of the rainbow was presumably curled up inside the cloud . |
30 | She lost him then and had to search and found him eventually curled up amid the wiring in the back of the record-player where he had n't hidden for a long time , not since two dark-haired people who were into black magic had come to dinner and he had disappeared for half a day until she found his secret hole . |