Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] [adv prt] in the " in BNC.

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1 Events seen on the television the might before , or read about in the day 's newspaper , or relayed as they happen to police stations throughout the province over the MSX machine , naturally facilitate talk on sensitive topics or cam be used as contextually related props to achieve the same end .
2 Then again they would just stand there , or squat down in the shade of a sand hill , their eyes fixed on the two endless parallels , following them out until they joined and lost themselves in the bush .
3 Only the white-chinned petrel makes an occasional sortie past or drops down in the tussac .
4 3.3.1.2 remove or tamper with the Trade Marks or other means of attribution or identification used on or in relation to the Licensed Products 3.3.1.3 use the Trade Marks in any way which might prejudice their distinctiveness or validity or the goodwill of therein 3.3.1.4 use in relation to the Products any Trade Marks other than the Trade Marks and the trade marks of and MacEnglish as set out in Schedule 2 B or used by in the Territory any Trade Marks or Trade Names so resembling the Trade Marks or Trade Names of as to be likely to cause confusion or deception .
5 When included , the inner shape was taken to be a hole or cut out in the total shape .
6 be ready to make informed guesses , and to correct themselves in the light of additional information , eg by reading ahead or looking back in the text ;
7 Small comfort for those languishing in the prisons or holed up in the hills , one suspects , but their toils have been translated into the stuff of great writing — Gabriel Garcia Marquez , Mario Vargas Llosa and Graham Greene have , in different ways , picked over the moral and political wreckage of Latin America , and you feel it needs writers of their calibre to make sense of it .
8 He said that if I did n't do it he 'd stop me having baths or going out in the cellar .
9 In other words , thirty-six ( or about two-thirds ) of the families that were resident in Willingham in 1575 had either moved or died out in the male line during the course of a century and a half .
10 If you put him on a wyvern there is a temptation to spend half the game flitting about behind the enemy lines or stuck up in the air .
11 At the most analytically simple , the difficulties remain as unexplored discrete entities or black boxes , which then have to be removed or steered round in the formulation of a conservation project or policy .
12 And i if the man in the field had got a grudge against a bloke who was stacking i or taking off in the stack yard he could make life hell .
13 ‘ Results ’ shall mean any inventions designs computer software reports drawings or other works and information made or generated under in the course of work on the Project .
14 All those boarded-up shops and only old people about , dreaming on doorsteps or creeping along in the sun .
15 Do not let foals get cold or wet out in the field .
16 It should be a fair , sensible and practical code , be well publicised — and to help shame misusers and lend muscle to the squashed , intimidated , or left out in the rain , and be posted in each bothy .
17 Protect your hair from changing colour or drying out in the sun by using a hair sunscreen with conditioners .
18 Has there ever been a tennis player that has written in to say ‘ thank you ’ to their fans who have stood by them through all their traumas and their losses , who have stood for hours in the rain or slept out in the streets to get a look at their idols ?
19 No decisions have yet been taken on which newspapers will be sold or closed down in the UK .
20 The boat skipper gives Kevin a choice — swim or struggle on in the bad weather and lose your money .
21 The difficulty with such a conclusion is that one can claim authenticity for anything that goes on in the classroom , including mechanistic pattern practice and the recital of verb paradigms , on the grounds that it may be conducive to learning ( type 3 ) and a feature of the conventional classroom situation ( type 4 ) .
22 Splitting ‘ But then Alison never discusses anything that goes on in the household .
23 Because of the risk of rejection by the ITVA , the vast majority of commercials are first shown to them at script stage , and the discussion and negotiation that goes on in the majority of cases takes place on scripts alone .
24 G. observed that although holidays mean a shut-down in industrial activity , they can lead to plenty of pollutions because of the cleaning that goes on in the factories .
25 Fourthly , at the level of individual test items , a question can be asked about how well they represent the learning that goes on in the classroom .
26 She told me she takes an interest in everything that goes on in the house , and that the party line was a great help to her .
27 Now clearly not everything that goes on in the body or mind is voluntary .
28 It 's an environment , and it 's actually an activity that goes on in the classroom .
29 But you were telling me that there 's a lot of research that goes on in the universities .
30 erm There 's probably two-thirds of the logging that goes on in the tropical forest , which is about 5 million hectares a year erm is of that nature , so that the forest is left to recover after the logging has gone through .
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