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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 As he kissed her again he slowly felt for the gusset of her panties , pulled them to one side and entered her expertly .
2 The fourth shot struck again in the chest , slamming Doyle hard against the wall , leaving a bloody smear as he slowly slipped to the floor , his eyes half closed , the breath wheezing from his lungs .
3 He deftly felt along the arm .
4 The fifth case belonged to a different category : a gentleman named Thomas Arundell was given leave to demise a tenement and three yardlands which he presumably treated as an investment .
5 He eventually came to a kind of theatre , which he also knew was Mandru 's morning room , expanded to vast proportion .
6 The Office tells us that he eventually settled in the area known as the county of Richmond .
7 He eventually squeezed through a 12-inch gap in his shattered rear windscreen , and crawled up the bank in agony to raise the alarm .
8 He eventually graduated as a bachelor of astrophysics at London University .
9 The former world champion had saved four match points in rallying from 2–5 in the fourth set , which he eventually won on a tie-break , before winning the fifth set 6–0 but he had little to offer in the doubles , when he and Eric Jelen were beaten in straight sets .
10 He eventually surfaced in the hospital kitchens , where , through his flirtatious manner with a fat lard-like female cook , he had managed to scrounge a free meal .
11 He eventually scrambled through the door and onto the top of the sinking tanker .
12 MP for 20 years , when he successfully fought against the closure of Shildon wagon works .
13 Joe Maitland his boss was very often out buying and selling and he rarely interfered with the running of the store .
14 In his abstract ballets or interpretations of music , he rarely worried about the mood or emotional content of the music .
15 By stating that he rarely went to the theatre , and needed to be forcibly taken there if he went at all , he managed to lay bare the inadequacies of modern drama and defined the conditions of a new sort of drama altogether .
16 He rarely came into the office , spending most of his time with his old friends waxing lyrical about his splendid son-in-law to be .
17 He rarely spoke to the rest of us peasants in the house , though when he did he was nothing but polite .
18 In 1642–3 he apparently served as an intelligence officer under the Long Parliament 's committee of safety .
19 The first of these , which formed part of Gloucester 's original endowment , was the manor of Kingston Lacy in Dorset , which he apparently held for the rest of the reign .
20 The first of these , which formed part of Gloucester 's original endowment , was the manor of Kingston Lacy in Dorset , which he apparently held for the rest of the reign .
21 A muscle twitched in his cheek , and she waited in slight apprehension for an acid rejoinder , but he merely nodded towards the radio on the kitchen dresser .
22 He merely flew into the airport , where the military rescue operation was being organized .
23 He merely sat at the coffee counter there , hour after hour , alone .
24 Rainey believes he could n't make a corner at GP speed if he merely sat on the bike without pushing down — hard .
25 When at last he came to see her , he obviously believed in the story of the German and she was too proud to tell him the truth .
26 He was 64 — and too late : Boswell had already told Lady Macleod , therefore Johnson could not avoid the embarrassment he obviously felt at the prospect of congratulations .
27 He only knew of the life he had led in the baby-farming house , one of seventeen young children .
28 But he only had about a couple of hours to do it in — after I 'd rung from Hannover .
29 As it turned out , he only came for the funeral . ’
30 He only came to the forefront as ‘ governer and ruler of the kingdom ’ , to use Walsingham 's words , ’ after the Good Parliament of 1376 .
  Next page