Example sentences of "[noun] [adj] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | ‘ If that report is anywhere near accurate , they could knock anything we have at present clear out of the sky . |
2 | In the end , they priced the TSR 2 out of the market , though this outcome still lay in the clouded mists of the future . |
3 | In the wet , the broad ridge high up to the left is preferable , leading along to the conspicuous profile of Alport Castles — a huge landslip where millions of tons of shales and grits slid forward to create a spectacular feature above the hamlet of Alport . |
4 | Travel : Snakes alive out on the Worm 's Head |
5 | I , I think this business of up to the fourteenth is premiums due up to the fourteenth . |
6 | Wading out of the lake , his legs muddy up to the knees , |
7 | The light flooded down from five roundels high up on the far long side , as though in a cathedral clerestory . |
8 | So that 's when I was eating my dinner , when they were going up for the cup and she fell asleep , well you know with the wine in you , here was my eyes all out for the count . |
9 | Town Halls will take the extra £1 billion out of the £9 billion in their coffers from the sale of council houses . |
10 | I 'll bet he drives that Mercedes parked up in the lot . |
11 | They made the front roll bar so much stiffer that the cars understeered out of the race with the front tyres worn out . |
12 | There are also various local amenities close by in the Elms Parade shopping centre . |
13 | Although total revenues generated in the first-class game increased in actual terms , by seven and a half per cent , to the £24.5 million mark , the inexorable rise in costs has taken over £1 million out of the combined surpluses of the counties , which have descended to a dangerously low level of just under |
14 | No more than ten minutes ' walk from Celtic Crescent , in a wide drab street that was unserved by any tram route , its tall aspect , railed forecourt and large Star of David hewn out of the brickwork over the doors drew attention to its foreignness . |
15 | The path down to the beach was a precarious one , tiny steps hewn out of the sheer rock face . |
16 | Sails vary in size from 2m 2 up to the monster 8m 2 sails , allowing windsurfers the option of choosing the right sail size for the conditions . |
17 | Thus , a subsequent bonus issue payable out of the share premium account which arises on conversion of the preference shares ( from the premium element ) is taxed as a distribution . |
18 | Interestingly enough I looked into the same situation in America and Germany and in all three mighty industrial countries six out of the top ten firms had gone . |
19 | Under Alexander III up to the 1905 revolution , particular efforts were made to Russify the European peoples of the empire , to stretch , in Seton-Watson 's evocative phrase , ‘ the short , tight skin of the nation over the gigantic body of the empire ’ . |
20 | Colleagues , motion two six one , hormone replacement therapy , to be moved by G M B Scotland If the seconder and also the mover of two six nine from Yorks , would come to the front as well , and the Midland region who are moving comp six along with the C E C speaker Sue , we 'd be very grateful . |
21 | Swedish midfielder Patrick Andersson put Rovers 1–0 up on the day , but goals from David Hirst and Mark Bright settled the issue . |
22 | Prof Tim Congdon , from Lombard Street Research in the City , is the only one who wants Mr Lamont to take £3 billion out of the economy in taxes this coming year and £4.5 billion in 1993-94 , but that is to balance a loose monetary policy and another cut in interest rates , which he thinks is the best way of stimulating demand without fuelling inflation . |
23 | Prof Tim Congdon , from Lombard Street Research in the City , is the only one who wants Mr Lamont to take £3 billion out of the economy in taxes this coming year and £4.5 billion in 1993-94 , but that is to balance a loose monetary policy and another cut in interest rates , which he thinks is the best way of stimulating demand without fuelling inflation . |
24 | Michael Welby and his wife had hoped to be carried feet first out of the home they lived in at Gerard 's Cross for twenty-five years . |
25 | Why else would there be the persistent stories that the IB might not even make £3 million out of the 1991 competition ? |
26 | The room was to the left , fifty ch'i along the corridor , at the end of a cul-de-sac hewn out of the surrounding rock . |
27 | erm , I 'm , I 'm feeling a bit hard up at the moment , I had a |
28 | It 's a bit cold up on the field is n't it ? |
29 | There is no requirement for costs payable out of the bankrupt 's estate , be they the costs of the petitioning creditor or the costs of the solicitors acting for the trustee , to be taxed ( r 7.34 ) . |
30 | The official receiver or trustee can agree costs though if there is a creditors ' committee , they can require the trustee to ask for any costs payable out of the estate to be taxed . |