Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] [pron] [adv prt] the " in BNC.
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1 | And , or put it down the cellar in the |
2 | or put it down the cellar , you see , out the way . |
3 | Shall we smash it or lob it out the window ? |
4 | The consultant has explained that Tourette 's Syndrome is a rare and unfortunate condition , and he should fucking well know about those , he 's right off the Christmas tree , probably spent half his life sucking strange men 's cocks or taking it up the arsehole in a public loo in the Charing Cross Road . |
5 | He 'd get his mam to do them , or taken them down the launderette like Nick Kamen did . |
6 | Then it was gone ; and Bigwig 's fur was blowing in the whack of wind that followed it down the hedges . |
7 | It was that phone call that sent me up the cul-de-sac . |
8 | The Chancellor of the Exchequer was a little more friendly since he ‘ would rather give money for Education than throw it down the sink with Sir William Beveridge ’ . |
9 | She jangled a ring of keys , opened the door and led him up the bare , creaking stairway which climbed steeply out of the hallway . |
10 | Sometime after , pleasantly exhausted , I collected my horse from the stable , saddled it and led it down the causeway out of the manor gate . |
11 | The tongue acts as a pump , helping to suck in small forms of water-life and squeeze them down the throat . |
12 | Then The Sugargliders — their hair still glossy from the blood of Metallica , who tried to stop them coming in — stride across the shattered bar-room floor and pull their own heads off and ram them down The Rosaries ' throats . |
13 | Out of all the bands the NME posse catches at the CMJ , RATM are by far the most brilliantly relevant : the first to grab political issues by the scruff of the neck and ram them down the toilet pan . |
14 | Simply order them a couple of days in advance and pick them up the night before or on the day they are required . |
15 | You can buy them one day and bring them back the next |
16 | I also made a documentary about the U-boat campaign which in two world wars had nearly brought us to our knees ; and I have always regretted that after the last war , when we sank so many of them in deep water , we did not keep one as a trophy and bring it up the Thames into the heart of London : it would have been a perennial attraction for every schoolboy in the country . |
17 | Then she grabbed a handful of ice cubes from a nearby wine cooler and stuffed them down the front of her partner 's trousers . |
18 | He flicked something on the gun and stuffed it down the back of his cords , then held a hand out to me . |
19 | Riven 's slung arm hampered him , and he pulled the sling off irritably and stuffed it down the front of his jerkin , moving his arm in circles . |
20 | Sally took the strip of paper and stuffed it down the front of her skirt . |
21 | Only two and a half hours more to go , I told myself , and fixed the old lady with a hard stare that I hoped somehow conveyed to her what pleasure , what deep and lasting pleasure , it would give me to haul her off her seat and push her out the window . |
22 | I laugh and push him up the last step . |
23 | ‘ You can get a man inside it , and they 'll tie a heavy stone to the King 's body and push it down the pipe . |
24 | He kicked it open and flung me down the three steps into the street . |
25 | The corpse 's bracelet was beginning to squeal ; Fox dragged it off and flung it down the stairwell ; she did n't hear it land . |
26 | At least , this human being loyally follows me around the place , keeps tabs on me and rings me up the whole time . |
27 | She did n't go out drinking or dancing ; she did n't do as one mother she 'd known ( in a story of maternal neglect that I remember feeling was over the top at the time ) and tie a piece of string round my big toe , dangle it through the window and down the front of the house , so that the drunken mother , returning from her carousing , could tug at it , wake the child , get the front door opened and send it down the shop for a basin of pie and peas . |
28 | Well , let me tell you , ’ she flung at him acidly , ‘ you 're a bygone species , you 're on your way out , and if you do n't turn that wheel and head us back the way we came I 'll see you in gaol for this faster than you can say pieces of eight . ’ |
29 | I 've got to go to the loo in a minute anyway after I steal one of your cigarettes , notice the word cigarettes instead of the word fags oh I do n't know , I think I 'll go and sell my body , might make a couple of quid and leg it down the |
30 | I tell you , one night , if we knew he was coming , we would wait for him round the back and pitch him down the falls ! ’ |