Example sentences of "[noun] and [vb past] [pers pn] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 During his tour the French government , on Oct. 30 , officially reiterated its recognition of him as Haiti 's President and offered him political asylum .
2 The crisis secured his reputation as President and earned him immense popularity with the American people .
3 Corbett dug into his purse and handed her some coins .
4 I contacted the landowner immediately after the inquest to inform him of the result and gave him three coins , one for each of his sons .
5 At 11.30 on saturday night ward staff discovered he was missing — they began a search and found him fifteen minutes later .
6 Still holding the old man 's shirtfront , Ellwood yanked him back to the couch and threw him full length .
7 The fully-laden truck careered through traffic lights at a crossroads in St Austell , Cornwall , crushed her Vauxhall car and pushed it 100 feet , before virtually demolishing a butchery and crashing into a florist 's shop .
8 The first is nine pages of typed script and took her seventeen hours to do .
9 I picked up the chant and repeated it many times .
10 He conceived the idea of artificial daylight and gave it practical reality by filtering the light of an Argand oil lamp through blue glass .
11 After a few minutes of this silent contemplation the rider raised a curved horn to his lips and blew it three times .
12 Father Peter took three earthenware bowls from a small cupboard near the inglenook and served them generous portions of soup from a black bowl which hung perilously from an iron hook above the flames .
13 When a boy arrived at Eton he was allocated to a " classical tutor " who oversaw his work and gave him special tuition .
14 They said we 'd receive eighty cents a day for six hours work and promised us good food , good houses to live in .
15 His return fire lifted Weaver off his feet and flung him two yards backwards , to sprawl at Bodie 's feet as Bodie came racing through the side garden .
16 The grandparents completely dominated the boy and gave him high levels of attention for his difficult behaviour .
17 Peach retired in 1905 after 43 years service in a career which had taken him into nearly every part of Scotland and brought him world-wide recognition as an outstanding field geologist .
18 He did n't go to Mass , but it was said that the priests came down to him once a month and heard his confession and gave him Holy Communion .
19 Gradually he had started to reject food which had increased her level of anxiety and gained him more attention .
20 She was a lady of unearthly beauty who married a Count of Anjou and bore him four children .
21 One of them was Edward Pease , who invited Durham to his home and asked him many questions .
22 He smoked a cigarette and looked at her stubbly hair and bought her another brandy .
23 They barricaded the building and ocupied it all night .
24 In 1991 , for example , Fareed Armaly and Christian Philipp Muller cloned the banal façade of the building and relocated it full scale at the edge of a forest : ‘ Fassade Galerie Nagel 1:1 ’ showed the same , faceless , empty apartment building but joined to a work belonging to Munich art dealer , Hanns Daxer and his wife ( to which ‘ Fassade ’ now also belongs ) .
25 Pieces of pine from apple cases became cricket bats , tennis rackets or hockey sticks and gave them endless hours of pleasure .
26 He thanked the singer and gave him another sop , which he could ill afford .
27 The injury temporarily blinded one eye and gave him double vision in the other , but is now no more than a bruise , said his wife .
28 Poppy had managed to gather quite a collection of workmen 's boots , so I went to the pet shop and bought her some toys , which she loved playing with .
29 Eranio 's superbly struck 31st-minute goal gave them victory over Portuguese champions Porto and made it four triumphs out of four in semi-final group B.
30 Since the Kaszubes lacked any political organisation or ambition and had no recognition for their language , hardly any literature of their own and barely any sense of a common Kaszubian identity , the Poles thought of the Kaszubians as a joke and paid them little heed .
  Next page