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Sentences with through

through
T t
  • A path through the wood
  • The thieves were captured through his vigilance
  • The preposition is pronounced (θruː ). In other cases, through is pronounced (θruː )
  • Monday through Friday
  • through the night
  • As a journalist, you're through
  • A through train
  • Flying through the clouds
  • Hiking through the trees
  • A train that goes through Boston
  • Touring through France
  • To go through an experience, through the summer, went through all his provisions
  • To go through a red light
  • To fight through all the red tape
  • through her help
  • Done through error
  • To see something through
  • Soaked through
  • A through street
  • A through train
  • through traffic
  • A through ticket
  • through with an assignment
  • through in politics
  • The theatre was evacuated when rain poured through the roof at the Liverpool Playhouse.
  • He went straight through to the kitchen and took a can of beer from the fridge.
  • Use a proper fish knife and fork if possible as they are designed to cut through the flesh but not the bones.
  • Go up to Ramsgate, cross into France, go through Andorra and into Spain.
  • We made our way through the crowd to the river.
  • Allow twenty-five minutes to get through Passport Control and Customs.
  • He was killed at a road junction by a van driver who went through a red light.
  • The ends of the net pass through a wooden bar at each end.
  • ...electric currents travelling through copper wires.
  • Alice gazed pensively through the wet glass.
  • An atmosphere of anticipation vibrated through the crowd.
  • We're playing in New Zealand, Australia and Japan through November.
  • ...open Monday through Sunday from 7:00 am to 10:00 pm.
  • Men go through a change of life emotionally just like women.
  • I'm through with the explaining. [+ with]
  • A thirty-nine-year-old competitor collapsed half-way through the marathon and died shortly afterwards.
  • They are understood to have retired through age or ill health.
  • Those who seek to grab power through violence deserve punishment.
  • Do I need to go through my doctor or can I make an appointment direct?
  • It is possible that the present Governor General will be made interim President, if the proposals go through.
  • They want to get the plan through Congress as quickly as possible.
  • She was bright, learned languages quickly, and sailed through her exams.
  • He may find the line cut on the telephone so that he can't get through.
  • Let's go through the numbers together and see if a workable deal is possible.
  • She read through pages and pages of the music I had brought her.
  • ...Britain's longest through train journey, 685 miles.
  • I returned to the inn cold and wet, soaked through by the drizzling rain.
  • To pass through a tunnel; We drove through Denver without stopping. Sun came through the window.
  • To go through a stop sign without stopping.
  • To swing through the trees; This book has passed through many hands.
  • To travel through a country; to fly through the air.
  • They worked through the night.
  • To be through one's work.
  • From 1900 through 1950.
  • It was through him they found out.
  • To run away through fear.
  • The body of a car passes through 147 stages on the production line. The new tax bill finally got through Congress.
  • To push a needle through; just passing through.
  • This train goes through to Boston.
  • Soaking wet through.
  • To read a letter through.
  • To carry a matter through.
  • He barely managed to pull through.
  • Please be still until I'm through. When will you be through with school?
  • My sister insists she's through with selfish friends.
  • A through wound coming left to right and out the other side.
  • A through flight.
  • A through highway; through ticket.
  • Critics say he's through as a writer.
  • Cold through and through.
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