Example sentences of "[noun] [adv] [prep] the [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Hence , the person who used the sulk response successfully in the past will continue to use it , because it worked . |
2 | The driver sat drumming his fingers nervously on the steering wheel while the attendant busied himself filling the tank , checking the oil and radiator , and wiping the windscreen . |
3 | Mrs Sutcliffe , wearing dark tinted glasses , listened carefully in the packed public benches as Mr Lightman read out an affidavit by Oliver Duke , once the boyfriend of Mail on Sunday reporter Barbara Jones , in which he admitted taking part in a scheme to get the money secretly from the newspaper to Mrs Sutcliffe . |
4 | Breathe in from the diaphragm slowly through the chest to the mouth counting 1-2-3-4 then blow it back to the diaphragm with another 1-2-3-4 . |
5 | In other countries too , inflation will be a worry right at the start of the coming upswing . |
6 | Trim away excess and place the base on to the cake drum . |
7 | The Trust 's management is aware of the dangers , and seeks constantly to ensure that growth is matched by clear , flexible procedures which promote vitality and experimentation , by a healthy eagerness on the part of the managers to manage , and above all , by the delegation of responsibility right through the organisation . |
8 | So there was that allocation of system design responsibility right at the outset and that determined who would write the specification for what . |
9 | So erm you see that 's , that 's why when we had this we paid somebody to put this in cos the gas company would n't put my my boiler right out the back . |
10 | She must have made a huge error in giving change somewhere along the line and she felt defeated . |
11 | ‘ There is a change somewhere in the east . |
12 | He gripped it with his hands , got his foot on to the latch , heaved up and rolled over the top . |
13 | Delaney swung a foot on to the ladder . |
14 | With a bit of practice , you can learn to put a condom on without the punter knowing you 've done it ! |
15 | Prolonged frost will drive these birds on to the sea , but many return inland immediately there is a thaw . |
16 | Therefore for these people it may be sensible to attend both Fellowships right from the start . |
17 | I think it would prefer to blame somebody who 's already responsible — as you 'll know if you really do read the papers — for every dead dog and blocked drain right across the world . |
18 | incentive to get us up this last steep pull on to the summit of Beinn Ghlas . |
19 | l Louise looked at her young son and suggested he might like to take his easel on to the patio . |
20 | a move and that really he 's quite fortunate to have a buyer somewhere within the price he wanted . |
21 | Zigzagging our way down the street we saw a car coming towards us and thought some terrible error had allowed the driver on to the toboggan track . |
22 | Girls cheered and threw money on to the stage , but the curtain came down , the head hit him again and , with the curtain back up , the youngster was caned in the middle of the performance . |
23 | But clearly we can not blame a single organic agent for the simultaneous extinction of all the varied and unrelated groups of dinosaurs , the pterosaurs , the marine reptiles , the ammonites , the belemnites , the rudistids and many minor groups besides at the end of the Mesozoic . |
24 | Few can rival the Natural History Museum 's offer of drinks beneath its dinosaur , but Christmas and new-year parties have become a nice little earner for museums and galleries right across the country . |
25 | Until the industrial action frustrated plans for more formal INSET workshops , the open nature of the school 's formal consultative procedures , and the vigour and commitment of key individuals , seems to have spread discussion of library matters and project-involvement widely across the school . |
26 | When she returned to the kitchen , she found Beth sprinkling a shovelful of coals on to the fire . |
27 | We went into Sheffield right into the city and went to a pub . |
28 | Therefore , in order to get his legislative requests on to the statute-book , the President has to rely much more on ad hoc coalitions in support of each specific measure . |
29 | Henry unscrewed the top of the brass cylinder and shook out a bundle of sticks on to the table . |
30 | He did n't answer it personally , eventually about three weeks afterwards I got the letter from Customs and Excise , who deal with this , saying , in a rather remarkable last paragraph , We have to charge V A T right across the board . |