Example sentences of "[vb past] [adv] [prep] a [noun sg] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ I got on to a friend in Civitavecchia who seems to think that some mate of his saw Jeff this morning down at the harbour . ’
2 Well George got on with a lot of people like that but of course , he was a Mason you see .
3 When he got on as a substitute against Sweden he was first class ; in Albania he was one of our best players . ’
4 English-born , actually , and we got on like a house on fire .
5 They got on like a house on fire and did n't stop talking afterwards — it was Julian and Robert who wound each other up .
6 We got on like a house on fire .
7 Gav and my Aunt Janice got on like a house on fire , a combined location and fate I occasionally wished on them as I lay awake listening to the sounds of their love-making , a pastime I sometimes suspected I shared with people in a large part of the surrounding community , not to say northern Europe .
8 Well , you could have put that scene he made on at a theatre in the West End and charged for tickets , I reckon .
9 We signed another form , paid another , smaller deposit , and checked right into a motel in Santa Barbara for a long rest .
10 In this he argued powerfully for a revival of social citizenship and the ‘ developmental state ’ .
11 It was a masterpiece of international cinema which brought Korda all the financial backing he could need and a dream deal with United Artists that led eventually to a partnership in the American company .
12 I said , ‘ I am older than you , sir ( how easily that polite ‘ sir ’ crept in as a mode of address ! ) — old enough to discover that finding out often leads to less pleasurable states of mind than mere ignorance ! ’
13 The group , chaired by Judge Thomas Pigot , QC , a senior Old Bailey judge , recommends that the rule that children under seven or eight should not give evidence , laid down in a string of cases , should be abolished .
14 In the end , I got in through a hole in the side , but it was n't easy .
15 That 's basically when I got in with a guy in Memphis and we started Fernwood Records , and I got interested in the engineering side of it .
16 The coaching committee in fact , had originally settled for four boxers but then included a fifth and Crowley then got in as a result of tremendous pressure from the body of the floor .
17 Ellwood walked to his car and got in like a man with a purpose accomplished .
18 IN SEPTEMBER , a group of 50 people met together for a week of prayer at Our Lady of Good Counsel , Leeds .
19 The decline of around 35 per cent in the number of births between 1964 and 1977 led rightly to a review of the provision of educational places .
20 Apollinaire and Hourcade added that this conceptual or intellectual approach led naturally to a selection of simple geometric forms .
21 With the funds available , Florey collaborated with Chain , whose work on lysozyme , already mentioned , led naturally to a study of a wider range of antibacterial agents .
22 Recollecting that she had no money with her , Clare asked only for a cup of tea ; but Len made her and Bridget sit down while he queued , and returned with a loaded tray .
23 The Defence Minister barely flinched as the camera zoomed in for a close-up of his face as they ran the famous film clip from mid-December , 1987 , in which he promised that it would all be over by Christmas .
24 The Defence Minister barely flinched as the camera zoomed in for a close-up of his face as they ran the famous film clip from mid-December , 1987 , in which he promised that it would all be over by Christmas .
25 From the Labyrinth 's south-west entrance a paved ramp , now eroded beyond recognition , led down to a bridge over the Vlychia stream ; on the south side this was supported on a finely built stone viaduct , which carried the road on south-eastwards along the north front of the Pilgrim Hostel and then southwards between yet more Minoan houses .
26 ‘ Four of them got together over a couple of decanters of port and I listened to what I could .
27 so I got together with a couple of blokes from school ‘ Hold Your Head Up ’ by Argent was in the charts at the time We 'd play that again and again and again It was the only bass line I could play properly — because it 's so simple , it 's exactly the same all the way through .
28 The most that the British knew about armies was that intermittently over four or five centuries they got together in a sort of militia or Home Guard in case the enemy arrived , and the necessity of a state to run the affairs of the country for the country 's salvation , was never so present to the British mind as it always has been to the minds of most continental people .
29 recite and read aloud in a variety of contexts , with increasing fluency and awareness of audience ;
30 A royal charter , read aloud by a villager on horseback , proclaims Seamer Fair to be open for business for the next seven days ; but it is not , nor has it been for the last fifty years .
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