Example sentences of "and set [adv prt] for [art] [noun] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | With reluctance she pulled on a jacket and set out for the Rectory . |
2 | In 1980 McDevitt and an accomplice dressed up as Federal Express employees and set out for the Hyde Collection in Glens Falls , New York . |
3 | He put on his sandals and set out for the office of the babu who had the power to give his people what they wanted , or to refuse . |
4 | Realising that there was more snow on the way , she clenched her teeth and set off for the moors . |
5 | Although it was raining and freezing cold outside , we all got ready and pulled ourselves into our wet suits and set off for the river . |
6 | Miaow , thought Jenny as young Curtis stood up awkwardly and set off for the bar , turning after a couple of steps to ask , ‘ What do you want ? ’ |
7 | When he had gone , Arty , smiling to himself at what he considered a victory , got out of bed and set off for the bathroom to wash his hair . |
8 | We got some torches together and set off for the graveyard . |
9 | We put on our képis , straightened our ties , pulled our fingers into regulation gloves and set off for the guardhouse . |
10 | Godolphin only had to pick up the encyclopaedia and he was ready to put on his boots and set off for the Dominions again . |
11 | At matches he had to be watched like a hawk in case he wriggled out of his headcollar , and set off for the tea tent , where his doleful yellow face and black-ringed eyes could coax sandwiches and cake out of the most stony-hearted waitress . |
12 | He bounded over the thirteenth and fourteenth and set off for the Chair , that huge open ditch which forms the biggest obstacle on the course . |
13 | He got up and dressed as though in a trance , and set off for the Castle with the hangdog look of a condemned man . |
14 | When the attack ceased they managed to cannibalize parts to get one truck going and set off for the rendezvous with Fraser , only to find nobody there . |
15 | She combed her hair , applied her make-up and set off for the Post Office . |