Example sentences of "[was/were] [verb] his [noun sg] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 It was almost as if an invisible hand were pressing his finger against the barrel .
2 If only Mr Brooke were to stick his head above the parapet he would soon realise that fact .
3 Other treble scorers were Julian Pritchard at the United Pack and Simon Andrews at the Puckeridge , where As You Were recovered his form in the Ladies race .
4 His research work at the university 's petroleum warfare department led indirectly to him joining Esso , and within weeks he was faced with one of the many challenges that were to punctuate his rise to the top of the industry .
5 Both characteristics were to distinguish his rule over the next forty years .
6 The intention was to continue his career in the USA , and he was shipped to California , where , trained by Tommy Woodcock , his first target was the Agua Caliente Handicap , originally billed as the world 's richest horse race and run just over the Mexican border in Tanforan , out of reach of California 's restrictive betting legislation .
7 He was hanging his head over the edge of the bed and wondering what to do next when a spring burst in the mattress .
8 Chignell was helping his master up the steps .
9 Alex had spilled some juice on the table top and was drawing his finger through the orange puddle with enjoyment ; Sarah seemed completely preoccupied by the last mouthful of toast .
10 Tanner , as Commander of the Anti-Terrorist Branch , was stamping his authority on the meeting from the outset .
11 While Hunter was enjoying his debut against the Canadians , 23-year-old Underwood , making his debut , was tense , tried too hard and ultimately faded .
12 In spite of the predatory aunt , Shamley Green was to remain his home until the end of the war : he would engage in his ordinary business in London , and continue with his own writing in Surrey .
13 A man was walking his dog across the ice from the high flats on the left bank , and crash — in he went .
14 he played once more before the Lord 's show-piece and was called six times for throwing in the Hampshire match , but the selectors decided to risk him again in the second Test , where he was to meet his fate at the most famous ground in cricket .
15 He was banging his head on the post and shouting .
16 I WENT to see Joe Johnson this week because I was fascinated to find out how he was rebuilding his career after the heart attack last year which threatened to stop him playing .
17 It is generally assumed first , that this ‘ ceremonial recognition of his son as king in his own lifetime was something new ’ ( although Aethelred of Mercia , for example , is said to have appointed Coenred as his heir ( Vita Wilfridi , ch. 57 ) , second , that it was the first royal anointing in England ( though reservations have been expressed as to whether Ecgfrith was anointed or , if he was , whether he was the first ) , and , third , that Offa was basing his action on the recent papal consecration in 781 of the Frankish princes , Pippin and Louis , sons of Charlemagne ( though Byzantine precedents are also possible ) .
18 A decrepit old man , supported by a young boy in a huge coolie hat , was tapping his way down the alley , patterned robes trailing in the rainwater .
19 Jarvis thought he would enjoy hearing the sound of these trains while he was writing his history of the London Underground .
20 In March 1945 , a few weeks before the German surrender , Eliot was expressing his pessimism about the future ; a few days later he wrote his last commentary for the Christian News Letter and used the pseudonym of " Metoikos " or " resident alien " .
21 By the time Francis Place was serving his apprenticeship in the 1780s he and his fellows were avid consumers of leisure .
22 In this sense he was predicating his examination upon the operation of a self-regulating system for both state and private economy .
23 One more adventurous boy decided to explore the overgrown slope behind the hut and he was pushing his way through the undergrowth when he caught sight of a figure approaching the hut further down the slope ; the boy was close enough to see that the figure was that of a tramp wearing tattered clothing and crowned with a battered trilby hat .
24 Before the Burford constable could reply , Detective Eddy was pushing his way through the crowd and Constable Aplin hurried after him .
25 Willie Bond , the postman , was pushing his bicycle along the road to Nidden , at the end of his last delivery , and in the distance the rector could see Ella vanishing down the alley that led to Lulling Woods and Dotty Harmer 's house .
26 She was pushing his body to the limits of its endurance to divert and ease the strain on his spirit .
27 Clearly he was saving his powder for the next negotiating battle in the GATT talks .
28 One minute he was at the table and the next he was threading his way between the dancers , leaving Geoffrey asleep with his cheek resting on a bread roll , bits of tinsel glittering in his hair .
29 He was threading his way along the side of a steep and thickly wooded declivity when a voice hailed him from the other side .
30 He also mentioned that an engineer from the Boeing company had arrived and was informing his company of the failure .
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