Example sentences of "he [vb past] it [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Berger said : ‘ He made it to the first corner ahead of me and I tried to hang on . |
2 | In competition with 800 other boys , he made it to the last five , but nerves got the better of him during a final audition at the Criterion Theatre , in London 's West End . |
3 | His ‘ act as if you own the place ’ approach seemed to work , and he made it to the double doors that opened into the main tunnel complex , not even pausing as he attached a circuit board to a second brick and casually tossed it into the heart of the pile of drums on the dock nearby . |
4 | Jehan pulled his tunic over his head , and he laid it on the empty stool to his right . |
5 | Three days after receiving the inspectors report , he passed it to the Serious Fraud Office for further investigation . |
6 | Pitching the F1 as a ‘ super-bike ’ , he sold it at a retail price of £13,000 . |
7 | An owner now obtained ( in theory at least ) the same price for his land irrespective of whether he sold it to a private individual or to a public authority . |
8 | After this but before the rogue was traced , the rogue took the car along to a market in Warren Street ( where dealers commonly sold cars ) and he sold it to an innocent purchaser . |
9 | He sold it to an American bookseller , who broke up the historic volumes that had survived the hazards of more than six centuries . |
10 | The star lot , Holbein 's Lady with a Squirrel , was withdrawn two weeks ago by Lord Cholmondeley , when he sold it to the National Gallery for £10 million . |
11 | so he sold it in a wrong time he could have , he could have hold on to it another few months and got a lot of money for it |
12 | It was not a place to which he could take Maureen MacQuillan or any woman , and only partly because he shared it with a fellow MP . |
13 | He got it with the cruel bonus of a broken jaw but took Tyson the distance . |
14 | But Rutherford hooked well , Crowe provided several of his best cover-drives , the groundstaff captured a dog before it could interfere with play , and Tufnell 's effort to prevent a boundary by slide-tackling the ball had the same result as when he tried it on the same ground a year ago : four . |
15 | But when his father 's will revealed that his marriage to Venetia might mean his losing £10,000 a year ( approximately £400,000 today ) he defeated it by the simple but ruthless stratagem of getting Venetia converted to the faith which he had himself rejected in everything except name . |
16 | He found it on the far side , punched the red button and watched the big metal doors start to move . |
17 | He found it on the last day of 1869 under nearly twenty feet of sand . |
18 | He found it in a stoneflagged side passage , a door bearing a small brass plate : ‘ Garland ’ . |
19 | He regarded it as a testable conjecture . |
20 | However , he devalued the ability to reason about intentions as he regarded it as an immature form of causal reasoning . |
21 | He transformed it into a stately home and filled it with objets d'art from afar . |
22 | He played a diabolical second shot and he must have finished all of 20 yards from the hole , but he sank it for a 3 . |
23 | Davidson had of course great opportunity for influence upon Baldwin , and he used it to the full on this occasion . |
24 | He used it as a chemical store once it had been deconsecrated or whatever it is they do to unused churches . |
25 | We shall return to the second part of the old horseman 's description : here it is necessary to emphasize that he used it in an exceptional way . |
26 | In Sybil he had rejoined his past but he transplanted it to an artistic suburb of London which had been the haunt of legendary highwaymen , was now the roost of exiles and writers and only fifteen minutes from the West End theatre . |
27 | When Columbus spotted the crop that was to become the chief source of Virginia 's prosperity , tobacco , he dismissed it as a worthless weed ; he did , on the other hand , find time to remark on the beauty of the nightingales in a country where none exists . |
28 | He dismissed it with a faint , scornful laugh as he moved towards the door . |
29 | This back parlour , Hope thought , as he entered it for the third time that day , is like a little theatre : Act I , Colonel Moore ; Act II , Amaryllis ; Act III |
30 | I had built him up to play it right to the heart of the green but he played it like a nervous three handicapper . |