Example sentences of "he [verb] [adj] for [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 He became communicative for the first time .
2 Category three saw Jasper Sharpe outreach everyone to gain 127 points and he looks favourite for an overall winner ; Gareth Parry came second and Simon Scully was third .
3 The principle is fixed that a scholar aspiring to high office must first teach at a graded series of medreses , one after the other , and that only when he reaches a certain grade does he become eligible for the great offices of the learned hierarchy , the mevleviyets , which are in their turn graded .
4 He wears white for the same reason that he never drinks raksi , and that he 's eaten no food since morning .
5 On that form he started favourite for the 1988 Cheltenham Gold Cup but ran a listless race before being pulled up .
6 On that form he started favourite for the 1988 Cheltenham Gold Cup but ran a listless race before being pulled up .
7 Yet sometimes he feels nostalgic for the Californian variety , just as an honest man dining in the Tour d'Argent can decently long for a cheeseburger .
8 Then the smell of warm grass came to join that of the roses and gunpowder and he fell asleep for a few moments , dreaming of cricket fields and meadows .
9 He fell asleep for a few hours just before dawn and woke cold and cramped , his head on the small desk , his body somehow wedged on the stool .
10 He fell silent for a few moments , shredding the paper that had wrapped his sugar cube .
11 Then he fell silent for a little while , as if in meditation .
12 Once , hearing an unaccountable noise in front of him , which ceased on the instant , he kept still for a long time ; and when at last he moved cautiously forward , found Silver crouching behind a tussock of cock's-foot for fear of the sound of his own approach .
13 He kept quiet for a long time working out how long soap could keep for , then he just said , ‘ Well , we 'll have to sell the things . ’
14 He felt sorry for the old man .
15 He felt uneasy for the first time ever , a prickling at the back of his neck , a sense of personal danger .
16 He also said he felt responsible for the Flemish lady who , being royally connected , ought to be well looked after . ’
17 He lay awake for a long time looking for possible connections between the incidents and listening to Rain breathing .
18 Soon the lawyer said goodnight and went home to bed , where he lay awake for a long time thinking about Enfield 's description of Hyde , and Doctor Jekyll 's will .
19 Always got like that when he sat still for a long time .
20 He sat silent for a long moment , recollecting how the past few years had dealt with Donata Blount and her family .
21 He sat silent for a long moment , considering her soberly from beneath knitted brows .
22 He remained silent for a long time , staring at Emily as though summing her up .
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