Example sentences of "[verb] [noun pl] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | Here we show that the carrier generates an alkalinization outside and an acidification inside glial cells , and transports anions out of the cells , suggesting that there is a carrier cycle in which two Na + accompany each glutamate anion into the cell , while one K + and one OH - ( or HCO ) are transported out . |
2 | FIG. 4 The glutamate uptake carrier transports anions out of the cell . |
3 | The second solution is to try to carry ambiguities around in the form of constraints [ Sussman & steele , 1980 ] . |
4 | I saw one player push fans out of the way at the Australian Open this year . |
5 | I never dared to ask , but I understand now what it is that drives addicts back to the needle time and time again whatever the cost to their health and sanity ; I understand now what the mystics lay claim to when they speak of the peace that passeth all understanding . |
6 | There are profound differences , obviously , between blasting birds out of the sky with a shotgun , sitting quietly on a riverbank waiting for the fish to bit , chasing foxes or stags over open country on horseback or sending dogs down a hole to dismember badgers . |
7 | Those of Gide 's travel journals published as Amyntas are even more revealing of this process whereby loss of self becomes a discovery of self ; both selves , the centred and the dispersed , being kept alive , both being necessary for the lyrical , unorthodox Western narrative which Gide maps on to the African landscape and his own illicit sexuality within it . |
8 | The most important factor in keeping arrears down to the lowest possible level was exercising proper care in granting mortgage loans , checking the applicant 's income , his previous borrowing record , verifying that the property was relevant to the borrower 's needs and his ability to maintain it in good order . |
9 | This can be achieved by making contributions in the year of change and in the following two years , in the latter case by relating premiums back to the year of change . |
10 | A by pass for Newhnam seems unlikely , residents are hoping that time saved by the new second crossing might entice drivers back onto the motorway . |
11 | In the 1450s , James II wrung concessions out of the papacy , offered to arbitrate in a dispute between the king of France and the dauphin , and ran an aggressive foreign policy towards England . |
12 | A lack of vision has pegged Rovers back in the last month , plus diligent homework by the likes of Spurs … not any fall from grace on Shearer 's part . |
13 | But the problems of keeping microphones out of the picture , of different versions for foreign countries , and of editing the pictures independently of sound , mean such processes have become inevitable . |
14 | Planting it outside the backdoor was a sure way of keeping witches out of the house , and it was thought never to be struck by lightning ; cutting it brought bad luck , and traditionally it was the wood the Cross of Calvary . |
15 | The newly enthroned Tsar Nicholas I moved troops up to the Turkish frontier and forced the sultan to sign the Convention of Akkerman ( October 1826 ) , by which the Turks agreed to implement the clauses of the Treaty of Bucharest which recognised the rights of the Romanians and Serbs . |
16 | For about £6 each ( off-peak day return ) we have enjoyed days out in the Trossachs , Callender etc . |
17 | Often they built things out of the junk in the rooms and Endill became an expert at making submarines out of old bath tubs and washing machines . |
18 | National training in basic interviewing skills to be given to all police officers — this recognises the central role that confessions play in the police investigative strategy and the need to train officers out of the use of the ‘ persuasive techniques ’ , witnessed by the Commission 's researchers , which run the risk of producing unreliable evidence , in favour of a more open minded and even handed approach . |
19 | Casualties included a John Lewis security guard shepherding customers out of the store . |
20 | You could also pipe stripes on to the children 's clothing if liked . |
21 | A recent report from the EOC found that ‘ overall the Youth Training Programme does little or nothing to widen girls ’ horizons or to provide ways out of the low-paid and dead-end jobs which are a feature of many women 's lives in Northern Ireland today ’ . |
22 | ‘ Only if I forget and twist it , ’ he said shortly , and pulled a groundsheet and two tightly rolled sleeping-bags out of the pannier . |
23 | They will try to frighten voters back to the two old parties . |
24 | The rugged David McIvor — at No8 on the Scottish scrum feed but on the flank on France 's — was the one man who showed any real propensity for knocking men back in the tackle . |
25 | The 1988 Act allows open enrolment , so that schools are forced to accept children up to the limit of their capacity . |
26 | This philosophy is matched by the general willingness of the Nicaraguan people to accept ex-offenders back into the community . |
27 | Through these policies it was also hoped to pull women out of the work-place , by glorifying the role of nurturing , family women to reduce unemployment . |
28 | A court ruling on keeping abusers out of the family home has left SSD 's stunned . |
29 | ‘ Crew members are tearing dolphins out of the net and dumping them on the deck with little or no attention to whether they are alive or dead . |
30 | bring emotions out into the open ; |