Example sentences of "[conj] he had been [verb] at " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 All round his dingy housing-association flat in Stoke Newington , close to Amhurst Road , where he had been arrested at the beginning of the 1970s , were the signs of the new affluence .
2 James said he was told after the accident by the police that he had been recorded at 153 mph .
3 But if he had been in the water for some time , it was unlikely that he had been killed at the spot where his body had fetched up , and equally unlikely that the weapon which killed him was there to find .
4 ELBC radio ( Monrovia ) said that he had been seen at Man in Côte d'Ivoire , landing aboard a Cessna light aircraft with relatives , en route for Burkina .
5 When Tom told his grandmother he was moving out of her house and confessed — because since the accident he had also stopped lying , could not be bothered with prevarication — that he had been busking at stations , she told him she was horrified , she was disappointed in him .
6 I knew that he had been barracked at times , but I did not realize that he was so sensitive …
7 He looked as though he had been there for some time , and Shelley had a funny feeling that he was looking studiously down to hide the fact that he had been listening at the door to her conversation with Mrs Richards .
8 Marital work was accepted by these parents in an effort to solve the problem , and progress was made once the father finally admitted that he had been told at work that he was too domineering and was unable to delegate responsibility to his juniors .
9 In 1302–3 his son and heir John alleged that he had been murdered at the instigation of Walter Langton , bishop of Coventry [ q.v . ] .
10 It was true that he had been educated at a public school , but he managed to disguise this handicap very well .
11 She guessed that he had been standing at the window or listening for the sound of her key in the lock .
12 Joyce added that he had been informed at Galway , ‘ where I was stationed ’ , that he possessed the same rights and privileges as if ‘ of natural British birth ’ .
13 It transpired that he had been scouting at the Festival .
14 That had been in the first exhilarating days of their relationship , and he had been elated at their evident approval of her .
15 ‘ No it 's not ’ , said a Scots Nationalist friend one day — very rude to me — ‘ it 's not cosmopolitan , it 's colonial ’ , and he had been looking at me and thinking ‘ here 's one of those damned Englishmen sponging on the Scots , making a good thing out of them ’ .
16 His father had been working on the farm and he had been sitting at the door of the hut .
17 He wished that he could have listened to their conversation , but he would not have made much of it if he had been sitting at the next table .
18 It was a totally inappropriate thing to say , but she was a visitor , and the first since he had been staying at Fern Cottage on his own .
19 She met him again by chance on a train , after he had been lecturing at Bromley , and found him strangely excited , laughing like a manic-depressive and unable to sit still in the carriage .
20 His face and body were a mass of bruises after he had been attacked at his home by a forty-strong mob who were preparing to lynch him in the remains of his once beautiful garden when the military had arrived and bundled him into the back of a police van and brought him to La Tambier .
  Next page