Example sentences of "[verb] [vb pp] [pers pn] [prep] the [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | A bit o' glass 'ad caught him on the fore'ead , but otherwise we 'ad n't a scratch to show for it between us . |
2 | This accursed recession has blinded us to the fact that we are well placed , vis-a-vis our competitors in Europe , to create wealth . |
3 | At one extreme is the person who starts a diet every morning and has broken it by the evening . |
4 | When that news hits him , the narrator seems to crumble , even though a premonitory dream the night before has readied him for the shock . |
5 | Mellowes has assigned me to the duties of the administrative assistants , then to those of the statistical clerks . |
6 | I am glad that she has joined us for the debate . |
7 | But he has forsaken them for the moment , at least in his current Emmerich show , ‘ Some Very Recent Paintings ’ ( opening 14 January ) . |
8 | It could also be that for some of you 1988 has also seen some trouble , a bereavement perhaps , that has shaken you to the foundations . |
9 | I think the first evidence we have of that , is when Brocklehurst has placed her on the stool and publicly humiliated her . |
10 | It is your enthusiasm , dedication and sheer hard work which has placed us at the forefront of our industry . |
11 | He care for the whole of mankind and has given us in the Bible a guide-book by which to live . |
12 | Check the output which CREFDL has given you against the example of a successful run of the command file as shown in Figure 2.1 . |
13 | Agnes nodded and smiled at her ; then , as Nan came behind the counter , she whispered to her , ‘ His lordship has reminded me of the time . |
14 | ‘ a very long boy , with a very little head , and an open mouth of disproportionate capacity ’ , devotedly attached to Betty Higden who has rescued him from the workhouse in which he has been brought up , having been a foundling child . |
15 | In 1986 Metromedia 's six US television stations were sold to Rupert Murdoch , who has grouped them into the Fox Television network . |
16 | THE 1993 British and US Open champion , Patty Sheehan , had the better of a tense battle with Canada 's Dawn Coe-Jones to win the $700,000 Standard Register Ping — a 32nd tour victory which has catapulted her into the LPGA 's Hall of Fame . |
17 | PETER MARSHALL 's double-handed style has carried him to the top of the British rankings , and many observers were looking to this week 's British Open Championship at Wembley Conference Centre to provide proof of his potential at world level . |
18 | SUN man Paul Welford has reported him to the police , and Flashman said : ‘ If people want to do that , then fair enough . |
19 | ‘ Our visit has impressed us with the skill and the quality of our soldiers , and with the risks they run . |
20 | But it is obvious that the sentences form part of some larger act of conversational interaction between two speakers ; the sentences contain several references that presuppose shared knowledge ( e.g. ‘ that meeting ’ implies that both speakers know which meeting is being spoken about ) , and in some cases the meaning of a sentence can only be correctly interpreted in the light of knowledge of what has preceded it in the conversation ( e.g. ‘ You ca n't be sure ’ ) . |
21 | There is a dark power to their fastidiously constructed nightmare pounders which has pushed them to the fore of hardcore . |
22 | The misspelling may be because the child has not previously seen the word written down , but more likely because he has seen it in the context of his reading , without paying much attention to anything more than its contour — that is , he has recognised the word without having to decode it , and has understood it without giving its spelling structure close attention . |
23 | But coming from a theatrical background has prepared her for the highs and lows of an actor 's life . |
24 | Elsewhere , Frank Kermode has applied it to the fictions of Evelyn Waugh and Muriel Spark ( ‘ no matter what the characters say they all speak in some version of her voice ’ ) , while linking it with Bakhtin 's distinction , well-known now both in Russia and in the West , between the ‘ monologic ’ and the ‘ dialogic ’ imagination . |
25 | He has offered madness in the form of a minute ; she has accepted it in the form of an examination answer . |
26 | The feeble God has stabbed me to the heart . ’ |
27 | She plans to launch her own designer clothes label but that is one area where her younger sister has pipped her at the post . |
28 | John Major has made one for citizens , British Rail has done it for their passengers , the banks have formulated one for their customers and now the JS distribution division has done it for the branches . |
29 | The bread and the wine are consecrated with the reminder that ‘ through Jesus , God has freed us from the slavery of sin ’ and given us a life that is free of such bondage . |
30 | He has freed you from the burden of the rules of Holy Law . ’ |