Example sentences of "[subord] he [verb] a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Where he made a famous name
2 Following penicillin and cefotaxime administration he was transferred to the intensive care unit , where he made a complete recovery .
3 After a year 's study with the Revd C. Hodgson at Brathay Vicarage , Ambleside , he entered Trinity College , Cambridge in 1845 , where he began a lifelong friendship with Henry Bradshaw and Dr Fenton Hort [ qq.v. ] , and came under the influence of the writings of F. D. Maurice [ q.v . ] .
4 He resumed his studies in 1948 at New College , Oxford , where he took a first class honours degree and was called to the bar a year later .
5 Also in 1875 Townsend made his first tour to the Continent ; throughout his life he made regular visits to Europe , especially to northern Italy , where he developed a lifelong interest in architectural mosaics .
6 Only at the French chateau of Montagu House in Whitehall ( 1859 ) , where he owed a particular allegiance to his great patron the Duke of Buccleuch and was ever hard put to please his Duchess , was he again truly still at the height of his powers .
7 He was educated at Westminster School and Christ Church , Oxford ( BA , 1723 ) , where he formed a lifelong friendship with Henry Fox ( later first Baron Holland , q.v. ) , to whose social , financial , and vocational backing his career owed much .
8 He was educated at the Perse School , Cambridge , and won a scholarship to Pembroke College , Cambridge , where he received a first class in part i of the English tripos in 1928 and a first class with distinction in part ii in 1929 .
9 On Dec. 7 he put this intention into action by visiting Amritsar , accompanied by his most senior ministers , where he received a warm welcome from large crowds .
10 In early July de Gaulle paid his first visit to the US , where he received a warm welcome .
11 In 1901 he won an exhibition to Trinity College , Cambridge , where he received a second class ( division I ) in part i of the moral sciences tripos ( 1904 ) and a first class in part ii ( 1905 ) .
12 He was educated at Merchant Taylors ' School and Caius College , Cambridge , where he received a third class in part i of the natural sciences tripos ( 1921 ) and a second in part ii in 1922 ( chemistry ) .
13 Grayson played soccer for Parklands High School before going on to Preston College where he played a little rugby in 1989 but never thought of taking up the game .
14 The sick flocked to him , and in 1666 he toured England , staying for several months in Lincoln 's Inn Fields , where he treated a great number of sufferers with varying success .
15 Some men could hide there , where he had a small tower .
16 The body of Arthur Brumhill , who was 76 , was found last Friday in the basement of a pet shop where he had a part-time job .
17 The body of Arthur Brumhill , who was 76 , was found last Friday in the basement of a pet shop where he had a part-time job .
18 He subsequently went to King 's College , Cambridge , where he had a distinguished career as exhibitioner , scholar , and fellow .
19 Alongside this and particularly following the Exeter commission , Fowler also maintained his connection with his native county where he had a long-standing patron in William Courtenay , tenth Earl of Devon , his works including the Totnes bridge ( 1826–8 ) , a small group of churches , and alterations to the Earl of Devon 's Powderham Castle ( 1837–48 ) .
20 And having found a vantage-point where he had a clear view of the meadows and was himself sheltered , he halted his pony and stood to watch , narrowing his eyes to single out coat-armour , and number the forces in the English party .
21 He stayed in Buckingham Palace where he had a special classroom just for him .
22 He was not accepted into the department of meteorology but registered as a student in the department of mathematics , where he wrote a doctoral thesis on ‘ The Theory of Development in Dynamical Meteorology ’ .
23 In November of the same year he was appointed chaplain to Newgate prison , where he wrote a large number of Ordinary 's Account s of funeral sermons , confessions , and last dying words of criminals executed at Tyburn .
24 His father was an Ulsterman who emigrated to Scotland to work in the mines , where he married a local woman and presided over a strictly protestant household in which both parents were active members of the Orange Lodge .
25 Gilford 's success on the King 's Links , where he returned a nine-under-par total of 279 , earned him £62,500 and considerably strengthened his claim for a Ryder Cup place against the US in September .
26 Before the cholera outbreak in Two Years Ago ( 1857 ) , where he makes a second appearance , he alone among the landowners takes the doctor 's advice and sees that the pig keeps its distance from the cottage , and that the cottages themselves are thoroughly scoured .
27 Kunz was director of the Kunstmuseum in Lucerne , Switzerland , from 1977 to 1989 , where he exhibited a wide range of American artists before their names were known among collectors and dealers .
28 He wandered into the kitchen , where he found a freshly-brewed pot of tea .
29 He was mayor of Dudley in 1616 , taking an interest in Dudley Grammar School , where he built a new school house , and appointed Richard Baxter [ q.v. ] , the Kidderminster divine , as schoolmaster .
30 He organized the Cotswold Tradition exhibition at Cirencester in 1951 with considerable panache , and retired to Daneway House , Sapperton , Gloucestershire , where he created a new garden .
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