Example sentences of "this [noun] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Such had been the history of this camp up to the time I arrived there .
2 Some companies take this responsibility out of the salesperson 's hands and produce daily worksheets showing who is to be called on and in what order .
3 So powerful is that consideration , it is argued , that it lifts this case out of the ordinary Cyanamid considerations ( see American Cyanamid Co. v. Ethicon Ltd. [ 1975 ] A.C. 396 ) , in which the concern of the court is to preserve the subject matter and accept the risk that if the court should refuse the child may die before final decision , as a result of an intervening choking fit from which only ventilation could save him .
4 I 've got to get this meanness out of the way .
5 ‘ He was flashing all this money about in the Dragon .
6 And obviously we would want to take money out of reserves , our original amendment took one point three million pounds out of reserves and it 's interesting to see now that you 're suggesting almost that figure again and yet for years you 've been telling us you ca n't take this money out of the reserves , er you know we had to keep it for a rainy day .
7 But this experience up in the tree , the knobbled bark against his back , the leaves at his ankles , was of a different order .
8 Once , as he sat cross-legged on his mattress reading , deep in thought , I grabbed both his ankles , and yanked his legs , saying , ‘ Excuse me , but I have to take this wheelbarrow out to the garden . ’
9 I thought of this killer out on the empty , wild moor , and I felt more and more uncomfortable about my surroundings .
10 You can try to deny it if you like , but it wo n't get you very far when I play this tape back to the Press ! ’
11 Chairman Reacher , who admitted last weekend that he had already started contemplating life without Brian , added : ‘ We are going to get this club back on the rails and climb up the Premier League .
12 hairdryer to dry it out right and he 's drying this switch out with the hairdryer and all and everything turned the switch on and about five hundred volts were on shock so they had to call
13 This homology along with the finding that the genetically obese Zucker rat ( fa/fa ) , in which obesity is characterised by profound hyperphagia , have a 60% reduction in their fasting pancreatic procolipase content compared with normal rats lead to the suggestion that the peptide might have a possible physiological role in appetite regulation .
14 The dramatic development of transplant surgery brought this issue out of the restrained polemics of academia into the hurly-burly of public discussion .
15 ‘ Take this girl back to the castle , ’ he ordered tightly .
16 Close inspection reveals that mean smoothing creates relatively large residuals in months adjacent to the strikingly atypical months , where perhaps common sense would suggest otherwise ; if the percentage in February 1985 represents some kind of error , for example , then the less resistant mean has spread this error over into the adjacent months .
17 It is not possible to accept the belief that ‘ God pervades everything that is to be found in this universe down to the tiniest atom ’ , and not at the same time accept the idea of universal brotherhood and the essential unity and equality of all earthly creatures .
18 Having got this joke out of the way , she was then told no she could not have money for food , but she could have cash for a carpet .
19 She 'd tacked the first sketches for this picture up on the wall and they looked as if someone else had drawn them .
20 I 'll put this lapse down to the paucity of opposition .
21 Both will be sent for analysis and the results should be ready this evening along with the results of the scan .
22 Help me to grow and progress from this point on in the way I understand , respond and conduct my relationships with others .
23 With what-all they 're doing to this planet down at the equator , there 's some weird stuff happening up here .
24 More precisely , the infinitive evokes an event , and to , the movement from an instant situated before this event up to the instant at which the event begins .
25 " I 'd better ask Cowslip what we 're supposed to do about taking some of this stuff back to the warren . "
26 Now we 'd better get all this stuff off to the labs , but there 's no point in sending his keys — we shall need them . ’
27 ‘ She rang up an ’ said , you know , take this fellah down to The Randolph . ’
28 Yes , they 've turned the people in this district round from the way they were heading .
29 ‘ I got on to a friend in Civitavecchia who seems to think that some mate of his saw Jeff this morning down at the harbour . ’
30 He wakened sometime during the night and he heard this scrummage up in the in the light room .
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