Example sentences of "[was/were] [art] [adj] and [adv] [verb] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Evolutionary theory gave a natural origin to human institutions instead of the supernatural origin which was the received and legally sanctioned view in much of nineteenth-century Europe , and if institutions and ideas had a natural historical origin they could be changed in changing conditions . |
2 | Here was the partial and still nuanced defiance of their respective Alliance masters that indicated both a German refusal of the role of victims in the superpower struggle and a sense in both German states that the room for manoeuvre was growing . |
3 | But then both you and RIPPOE said that her mother was the same and always arrived late and so on for everything , so perhaps it is genetic ! |
4 | The most complete expression of this preconception was a linear model of human origins in which the white race was the last and highest rung in the ladder of progress . |
5 | There was a sinister and often rehearsed entrance wearing a long cloak and looking like Count Dracula . |
6 | Industrial America was a pluralistic and highly organized society . |
7 | He thought privatisation was a logical and highly motivating next step ; commenting ‘ AEA now has to win the hearts and minds of staff if privatisation is to succeed . ’ |
8 | The Jacobite riot at Newcastle-under-Lyme in July 1715 was a well-planned and carefully staged affair , and one of the patrons seems to have been Ralph Sneyd , MP for Staffordshire . |
9 | Mr. Woodward said that there was a substantial and clearly defined trackway used by local traffic presently running parallel to the east of the track joining others to the west and north of the parish boundary . |
10 | He was a Venetian and therefore descended from men who had ruled and schemed and dominated the world for centuries . |
11 | His column ‘ Listen Here Awhile ’ was a regular and highly praised feature of this newspaper for years — a column which mirrored Ulster life as he wandered into the highways and byways of the province meeting what he called ‘ the old worthies ’ . |
12 | It was a dignified and deeply moving occasion , the funerals of five ordinary people leading ordinary lives until they were gunned down by Loyalist terrorists . |
13 | There is no doubt whatsoever that this expansionism was a deliberate and carefully controlled policy ; Charles did not fight defensive or reluctant wars . |
14 | There was a widespread and strongly held view that the CITB should be retained , but that its management should be streamlined and reformed . |
15 | But the man was a romantic and probably saw Steve as an obstacle he might have to overcome . |
16 | Elliott was a long-serving and extremely experienced MI6 officer . |
17 | Off the field he was a quiet and relatively withdrawn family man , but with the ball at his feet and open space in front of him he became a demon . |
18 | Judge Ian Starforth Hill told Jones it was an ingenious and well thought out plot . |
19 | What held the two men together — apart from that click of friendship — was an unaffected and deeply worked love for Henry IV , Parts I and II and Henry V . |