Example sentences of "[pron] stood [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The early history was familiar to her from the memoir of the founder which stood in limp green leather covers on Gilbert Racy 's shelves at Betterhouse .
2 The stock still has a long way to go before its regains the 780p level at which its stood in early April before a warning of a slow-down in sales .
3 She stood with closed eyes , listening to the measured footsteps .
4 She stood with hunched shoulders , a pathetic picture of defeat and despair .
5 For a few minutes she stood in shocked silence ; she had been so sure that the rider from the woods had been herself … but now , realizing that the lover she had seen had been Morthen , she felt angry and upset .
6 Viola Machin , nevertheless , seemed impervious to it : she stood in bosomy grief , in a becoming coat of umber shade , dabbing her eyes at the pathetic bits of the service ; Desmond , in a heavy black coat , managed only an insurance agent 's decorous grief ; and Hilary looked as if cheerfulness might keep breaking through — which would probably , after all , be what Hilda would have liked most .
7 She needed someone to talk to about it all , needed a sharer of secrets , an ear to listen to her plans and , above all , someone to agree that she was on the right course , that both shopping expedition and holiday were what she stood in urgent need of .
8 She stood against laurel-black cherries
9 If only she could turn her back on the golden Dane whose gaze still ensnared her , lose herself in the masses and find her own way back to the hotel , but she was held where she stood by invisible chains .
10 She stood by detached .
11 My daughter was intrigued by the statue-like posture of members of the Household Guards who stood at strategic points en route , not moving an eyelid .
12 He was satisfied to leave the government of Sicily largely to the chancellor , Gauthier de Paléar , bishop of Troja , who stood for Sicilian rights and was anti-German .
13 Among the different groups now contending for influence , the most important are the democratic reformers , the men and women who stood in recent local elections on platforms that broadly advocated multi-party politics and bolder economic change .
14 Cuka 's understudy , Gloria Connell , who stood in opposite Crawford for a week , said , ‘ There were no public rows between the two , but it 's true to say the atmosphere was very cool ’
15 This one does seem to be a great boost to Gen Aoun , who stood in lonely defiance of the Arab and international communities , his Muslim compatriots , and many in his own Maronite enclave .
16 This one does seem to be a great boost to Gen Aoun , who stood in lonely defiance of the Arab and international communities , his Muslim compatriots , and many in his own Maronite enclave .
17 In their protest they sought to restore some political coals to Newcastle : the Declaration of Arbroath in 1320 committed the lay and ecclesiastical nobles of Scotland to support Robert Bruce , who stood against proud Edward 's army , and sent him homeward to think again .
18 The Fish got us a good position at the back of the club , where we stood on wooden beer crates holding on to each other as the floor seemed about to crack open with heat and stomping .
19 Shaken , we stood at opposite sides of the room , in separate silences .
20 We stood at opposite sides of the room and scored points when one of us failed to keep the ball moving after the permitted single bounce .
21 As we stood beneath white-washed trees , Will spoke admiringly of his study-bird .
22 In fact they stood for National War Museum .
23 They stood with rigid tension listening to the brooding silence of the jungle all around them .
24 They walked slowly up the church path , past the old graves , those so seared by time and weather that they stood as grey shapes furred with lichen , names and dates no longer legible , uniform in obscurity .
25 Now , bearded to bandaged face , they stood in utter stillness .
26 When those brief moments of ecstasy were over and the everyday world took precedence again , they stood in shocked silence while Bert Rafferty carried Celia up the cliff .
27 They stood in deep shadow by the wall of the bridge .
28 Above the rush and scurry of the traffic they stood in monumental stillness , each leaf precisely outlined against the deep blue sky .
29 They stood in fascinated awe as the immense panelled surface slid past .
30 The club-mosses and horsetails were still , for the most part , swamp-dwellers and there they stood in dense ranks , 30 metres tall , some with woody trunks two metres in diameter .
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