Example sentences of "[pron] [was/were] [verb] he [prep] [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 What struck me was the way in which he seemed to have little difficulty not merely in coming down to my level but in entering into my feelings , as if I were telling him about the most natural matter in the world .
2 I like him , I was watching him on the telly the other day , I think he seemed nice .
3 I was accompanying him in the show anyway and I think we just had the nerve . ’
4 About once a week or fortnight I had to attend some quite high-powered meetings in London to which James came too , as I was feeding him at the time .
5 I was helping him across a busy six-lane road in north London .
6 Poor love , ’ she smiled faintly , ‘ he was half asleep , and at first when he heard what I had to say he thought I was leaving him in the lurch after all .
7 I was telling him about the Glory , and I said I 'd driven it over and what did he think — was he looking forward to driving it and all that — ’ She paused excitedly .
8 I was beating him in the storyline , but he was , in reality , desperate to win all the races .
9 He saw the work that I examined and dealt with , and on the Tuesday , I was saluting him as an inspector .
10 He put a solicitor down , and last time I spoke with him I was defending him on a for fraud .
11 Someone was shaking him by the shoulder as the band played ‘ God Save the King ’ and everyone else in the cinema stood to attention .
12 It was back in England for ( Sir ) Alexander Korda [ q.v. ] in 1933 that Laughton made his screen name in The Private Life of Henry VIII at the start of a sequence of major cinema biographies ( The Barretts of Wimpole Street ( 1934 ) , Mutiny on the Bounty ( 1935 ) , Rembrandt ( 1936 ) , and the unfinished I Claudius ( 1936 ) ) , which were to see him at the very peak of his reflective , anguished talent for larger-than-life monsters of reality .
13 Ten miles away on that December evening , Walter Schellenberg lit a cigarette in the back of the Mercedes which was speeding him towards the castle .
14 Dyson swung the wheel to the left , then swung it sharply to the right again to avoid a lorry which was overtaking him on the inside .
15 Behind the scenes , Sir Reginald was negotiating with political leaders about the composition of the Executive Council which was to assist him in the government of the country until elections could be held .
16 She glanced up at him , feeling oddly shy , almost as though she were meeting him for the first time with no doubts , no mistrust , between them .
17 In the centre of the piece was a carving of a shoemaker resisting four shaggy devils who were dragging him from the embraces of what at first Athelstan thought was a young lady but , on looking closer , -realised that with his tail and close-cropped hair , it was a depiction of a male prostitute .
18 If you were to touch him with a pin — and he 's a boy or a girl by now — he 'd move away , he feels pain .
19 You were to kill him in the alleyway and capture the Time Sprout .
20 She was pursuing him like the Fury pursuing the crime .
21 The boyish expression transformed the hard planes of his face and she stared at him as if she was seeing him for the first time .
22 She was watching him through the cigarette smoke to judge the effect she was producing .
23 She was treating him like a little boy .
24 Now , all that mattered was that she was following him up the stairs to an elegant Georgian town house .
25 She was carrying him as a baby along a valley devoid of vegetation and with high hills on each side .
26 His excitement meant nothing to her ; she felt she was covering him with a pall of ash .
27 The woman was holding on to him with one arm , and with the other she was pounding him on the back , very hard .
28 Still peering from the corner of his eye , Frankie stared at her breasts for a long time before he realized with a jolt that she was observing him through the mirror .
29 He turned towards Sylvia Toye , who was watching him with a smile on her face .
30 In 1901 he was elected to a fellowship at Caius ; among his colleagues there was ( Sir ) Ronald Fisher [ q.v. ] , who was to succeed him in the chair of genetics .
  Next page