Example sentences of "[vb past] [prep] [pers pn] the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 That 's right : someone rang up and asked for him the other day .
2 Ruth sat on her bed and drew towards her the unfinished drawing of lions apparently devouring people — Christians probably , from the school 's Religious Knowledge .
3 Rushing over to the open suitcase standing on a side table , she snatched from it the long paper-cutter she had brought back for Harold from New York .
4 ‘ Forgive me if I seem to be playing the amateur sleuth once again , but something else occurred to me the other day , which might or might not be of interest to you . ’
5 You drove past me the other day when I drov , was it you ?
6 He came with me the whole way of my round south of the Court .
7 ‘ To be sure , the lad 's name is Gabriel , and he came to me the very day I was needing an angel .
8 The chapel seemed to me the focal point of our small , humble community .
9 She sought out Alix , to tell her of her plans to remarry , and they spent a long evening , over spaghetti and Hirondelle , talking of what already seemed to them the distant past .
10 Conversely slave-owners and self-lords on the whole stood by the system because it seemed to them the very foundation of their society and their class .
11 He had even provided , as an antagonist to North , a fictional member of the NSC , ‘ Aaron Sykes ’ , whose job it was to give flesh and voice to those invisible and voiceless colleagues who had presumably tried to dissuade North from what he was doing : to appear , as the Laws appeared to Socrates , ‘ humming in his ears ’ , about the offence he would cause to country , friends and laws if he did what seemed to him the right thing .
12 ‘ I … er … came across him the other day , that 's all . ’
13 When I came across it the other day , I was slightly embarrassed .
14 His daughter fed him on tins of baby food , which again confirmed for me the sour joke of existence and the particular contemptibility of this old man .
15 ‘ What happened between us the other day , after our picnic — ’ his deep voice was suddenly slow and compelling as he steered the boat slowly towards the busy quay at Kalkara ‘ — that seemed … special .
16 She left a series of notes in my pigeonhole that started off plaintively : ‘ I 'm very confused by what happened between us the other night .
17 Every shrill cadence of the birds ' song , every soft utterance of Dr Tariq poured into him the high exhilaration of fear .
18 Johnson extracted from him the English meaning of the Gaelic place-name ; it signified a place of , or near , water , conforming , claimed McQueen , to ‘ all the descriptions of the temples of that goddess , which were situated near rivers that there might be water to wash the statue ’ .
19 Of course , he does not care a rap whether it is true or not — but he is dreadfully afraid that by prematurely espousing it he might lose some subscribers , though he acknowledged to me the other day he thought it would be generally accepted before long . ’
20 What 's that treacle thing that we got from you the other day ?
21 Along the way Brian talked to us the whole time , not in a loud voice or a whisper , but in a low confident tone , the kind every good falconer adopts when he 's in the presence of birds of prey .
22 I dare not ask directly what is the precise matter but I see in Mr Browning 's eyes an anxiety deeper than usual and he confessed to me the other day that he fears there may be water on the lung .
23 About the homework bit er I thought about it the other day and obviously mine was n't brought up we 're having a set detention night are n't we ?
24 Her tone teasing , she added , ‘ If you went about it the right way I 'm positive you could have her eating out of your hand in no time at all .
25 ‘ She also said if you went about it the right way you could have me eating out of your hand . ’
26 Now the carriage cleaning inspector had a good job if he went about it the proper way .
27 But they went about it the wrong way .
28 They even brought with them the distinctive knocker which was later returned to Oxford in the late nineteenth century .
29 Harnack himself defended that development as necessary for the survival of Christian faith in the ancient Graeco-Roman world , but believed it must now be transcended , for it brought with it the immense danger of transforming the original and authentic gospel of love preached and exemplified by Jesus into abstract intellectual formulae , of confusing the husk with the kernel .
30 I 'm sure your friend will put a good word in for you , ’ which brought from her the sharp retort : ‘ Yes , he will !
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