Example sentences of "[was/were] [v-ing] [pron] [noun pl] [prep] a " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Two conferences of the Football Supporters ' Association have called for a re-think , but it seemed we were banging our heads against a brick wall .
2 The hill peoples were sending their representatives to a gathering at Panglong in the Shan States .
3 Afterwards I met two of these gentlemen who were exercising their elbows in a nearby hostelry and exercising their right to disagree on conscientious grounds with the Wesleyan distaste for alcoholic beverages .
4 I got up feeling bilious and with a burning headache , wobbling from the previous day 's struggle , as if I were finding my legs after a long illness .
5 Retailers were pinning their hopes on a strong Christmas after recent figures published by the Central Statistical Office showed that the seasonally-adjusted volume of retail sales fell by 0.1% in November , reversing three continuous months of growth .
6 Ministers were pinning their hopes on a change of wording in ETA 's latest statement .
7 But many of their future commanders — John Durnford-Slater , Peter Young , Mike Calvert among them — were preparing their men for a new type of soldiering .
8 About five weeks ago , I had been invited to a presentation by Garth Enterprises , who were unveiling their plans for a golf course and leisure complex which would also include a hotel and the provision of some expensive houses alongside each fairway .
9 It took me a long time to work out why I was eating my meals off a trampoline . ’
10 I felt as if someone was pressing my lungs with a steam-iron .
11 He was picking his teeth with a match while someone on the phone talked his ear off .
12 Simultaneously , de Gaulle was pushing his ideas in a parallel series of bilateral meetings , arguing the case with Adenauer in February 1961 and then with the Italian premier in early April .
13 Dr Les Atkinson , vice-president of the chamber and chairman of BP Shipping , forecast : ‘ Any shipowner who disregards this guidance and causes a pollution incident is going to have an impossible task establishing in the courts that he was operating his vessels in a prudent and competent manner . ’
14 He looked helplessly at the adjutant , who was eating ; then at Woolley , who was cleaning his ears with a match stick ; and turned back .
15 Joyce was informing his listeners of a massive air strike by Luftwaffe bombers against the Kent coast .
16 After a moment she realised that he was extolling her virtues as a personal assistant .
17 The dour , austere Miss Sowerby was wiping her eyes with a handkerchief she had tucked under a sleeve .
18 The woman was wiping her eyes on a screwed-up tissue .
19 With the knowledge , half admitted , that she was treating her friends in a pretty shitty way , and did n't deserve to have them , Cassie resolved to phone Stephanie on her return and arrange a meeting .
20 I suddenly found that I was losing my powers at a time when I needed them most .
21 Even as I was recording my triumphs over a hostile and alien world , I was also expressing such sentiments as , ‘ Oh , it 's not even worth writing down — the same , usual , dismal , tedious , boring story . ’
22 As Roger Forester was closing up the cottage behind him DI Mike Schaffer was swinging his legs off a creaking camp-bed in the office of the Langstone schoolhouse and sitting groggily upright .
23 She was reading him parts of a letter from some fellow with a foreign name .
24 I believe I was collecting my thoughts for a renewed effort when the young gentleman suddenly rose to his feet , and clutching his attaché case to his person , said : ‘ Well , I think I 'll go and take a little fresh air .
25 At British level Rob was finding his feet as a coach , but found the initial lack of funding frustrating .
26 Lloyds was advertising its services as a small business adviser at the time , but the bank still lent them the money without any business plan and despite a survey report saying it was worth quite a lot less than the loan .
27 One month later , the young wife of a senior member of the Politburo was astonishing her friends with a necklace , earrings and bracelets of positively Tsarist splendour .
28 A skinny Danish girl , who was washing her clothes in a bucket of pondwater , told me with aristocratic scorn about arriviste wastrels on the next beach who were squandering 90 pence a night on their rooms .
29 The meeting was being held in the dining-room , and he was leaning his haunches against a table at the very front of the room , looking extremely cool and self-possessed .
30 The last fish he had landed was a magnificent sea-trout weighing 6lb and , as he applied the priest , he was telling his companions about a similar fish , caught by his father in the dim and distant past : ‘ A beautiful fish , gentlemen , just like this one is . ’
  Next page