Example sentences of "[coord] it [vb past] [prep] a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The story of the railways is intimately tied up with the wider saga of the industrialization of Europe , and it proceeded at a different rate in each country .
2 Lack of an alternative summer team sport protected cricket between the wars and it benefited from a brief post-1945 resurgence in numbers , but then numbers fell so dramatically that by 1965 they stood at about a third of the post-1945 years .
3 He kicked one , and it disintegrated into a white powder .
4 Tony Dobson put Portsmouth ahead early on and it looked for a long time as though that was going to be the only goal of the game .
5 Where , when you sub- contract some international work , at some stage you get something back that you checked and it looked like a right pig but .
6 It seemed bigger than the sun and it sailed with a peculiar swiftness up into the heavens , growing paler and brighter as it did so until it lit up the plain with a dull , yellow light .
7 Also , academic life had not exactly left me well-off and it seemed like a good idea to try to earn a slightly larger salary so that I would have something to put towards my eventual retirement .
8 The switchboard answered quickly and it seemed like a good omen .
9 In the meantime , my thirteenth birthday was coming up , and it seemed like a good time to revive my request for the perfect present : a bird of prey .
10 The picture could be executed by a company called Scanachrome in which I already had some interest and it seemed like a good opportunity to get involved with the process .
11 But this was this big case was on you know , and it went on A big lawsuit it went on for quite a while .
12 He blasted it and it went in a straight line from his foot to the top right hand corner .
13 Maggie was called to see Mr Parnham during the next morning and it came as a great surprise .
14 He was sort of evasive and fey and appeared relatively shy and my impression of him at the time was that he had little charisma , no star quality and not a lot of talent , and it came as a big surprise when he became as successful as he was .
15 A canal had been dug by French prisoners of war from what is now Dartmoor Prison , and it passed through a 2-mile-long tunnel to the hillside above the quay .
16 An inset was at one time created for Skelton , and it resulted in a considerable amount of building on the south side .
17 He said that he did it because everybody wanted him to do it , and he even agreed with me that bits were like Simon and Garfunkel and it sounded like a hundred songs written before , and admitted that he was cashing in on the moon landing but thought he could make some money doing it .
18 They brought their families , some of them intermarried with time-expired soldiers who chose to settle here , too , and it grew into a real , life-and-death town , where everyone had a stake sunk so deep that when the legions started to leave , the locals still could n't get out .
19 My room was over the back door and it squeaked like a murdered rat .
20 In particular , it proposed the ending of detention without trial as soon as was politically possible , and it condemned as a serious mistake the establishment of a ‘ special category ’ for convicted prisoners claiming political motivation .
21 At that time the party seemed to have many of the characteristics of a party which did not expect to win elections : it had changed its leadership only a few weeks before the general election was called , Lansbury having resigned and been replaced by Attlee on a temporary basis ; and it suffered from a good deal of internal factionalism , and found its major policy demand — collective security through the League of Nations — ‘ scooped ’ by Stanley Baldwin , the Prime Minister .
22 A good deal of the letter was fantasy on the part of its sixteen-year-old author and it ended with a great flourish of romantic rhetoric .
23 ‘ I 'd never have guessed , ’ she quipped , and it ended in a raucous cough .
24 After two more attempts he tried the door ; it was unsecured and it opened into a little hall from which stairs led upwards .
25 Ten minutes later in the gymnasium downstairs Lee reflected that if she threw one of the dumb-bells she was using at the wall-sized mirror and it shattered into a hundred pieces around a central trauma , she would wake herself up and everybody around her and get into the local papers .
26 And it turned to a great marsh .
27 Well , it was actually started by a few railway men , th right opposite Street there used to be hand laundry , and then there was a row of houses , from there , running up to the corner of Street where the club stands originally , but in the beginning it was just a row of small houses , and it started with a few railway men having a meet holding the meetings in this house , in these houses , and I 've got very dim memories of how it actually started but it was a real event when they were first , before they actually built the club it was run in the row of houses that ran from up Street as I say there was a little hand laundry corner of Street heading onto Street on the left hand side was the greengrocers , and that , they kept that greengrocers for as long as I can remember .
28 Mrs , I think , suspected the latter and it showed in a permanent coldness to them thereafter .
29 It was beautifully coloured , and it flew in a familiar jerky manner .
30 But it lasted for a good seven or eight years after the war was finished .
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