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

  Previous page   Next page
No Sentence
31 He believed there was a future for Swanage and therefore he had striven for a great number of years to improve it — ( laughter ) — but he was very glad that those who came from afar were pleased and satisfied .
32 Although I 'd followed the progress of the King trial in the papers , it was only then that it began to hit home what a symbol he had become for the suppressed majority of my city .
33 Further , on appointment he had realised for the first time that the eastern parts of the District remained largely undeveloped by the WEA .
34 It had been rather an expensive one as he had gone for a fleecy-lined designer number with flashes of blue , to match his eyes , on the shoulders and down the legs .
35 He had gone for a short walk over some fields — his constitutional — and had met a woman pushing a bicycle .
36 He was reminded of the statements of the stableman who had joined him for a drink at the Bull , situated at the end of Cross Street , and of the café owner where he had stopped for a fried breakfast .
37 Coleman had gone up on the roof the previous evening for one of his periodic checks of the antennae he had rigged for the listening post .
38 He mounted the horse he had led for the last hour or so and walked it cautiously down into Buttermere which he entered with the utter conviction that he had been there before .
39 At first he felt more relaxed than he had done for a long time .
40 Gabriel went back and told God what he had done for the three brothers .
41 Mr McQuaker said he had just left work at the Haughton Road service station at 9pm as he had done for the last 25 years when the youths pounced .
42 According to the police , Fernandez told the investigating magistrates today he had trained for the past six months for the assault .
43 The Sejm ( i ) rejected his proposed constitutional changes ; ( ii ) voted to send the presidential draft electoral law to the Constitutional Commission for further examination ; ( iii ) rejected the date of May 26 which he had proposed for the parliamentary elections ; and ( iv ) instead approved the holding of parliamentary elections by Oct. 31 , 1991 .
44 He had booked for the full residential weekend , as he did every time one was held .
45 He preferred to drink — ignoring the landlord 's porter — from his silver flask , which he had substituted for the broken glass of brandy .
46 He had known for a long time , but had refused to admit it to himself .
47 at last the confirmation of something he had known for a long time .
48 Grey Egerton , describing in 1852 a fossil fish which he had lithographed for the Geological Survey , could take a more cheerful view , calling it a ‘ pretty little specimen ’ .
49 He raised the mug to his lips and sipped the hot sugary tea , remembering the day when he had sat for the first time in Mr Corcoran 's office .
50 He had opted for the cynical , guarded approach , and now he could see that for all the safety it had brought him — here he was , in his second year , still solvent , heart intact , unmugged and even succeeding in his studies , despite all his mother 's fears — every defence had its price , and he had paid in a separating distance , incomprehension .
51 Physics realised 67 per cent ; History a promising 77 per cent ; and Mathematics was strongest of all , with an average of 77 per cent over three subjects : algebra I and II at 72 per cent and 80 per cent , geometry at 86 per cent and trigonometry at 70 per cent ; ( he admitted to us that he had opted for the latter at school , because it enabled him to evade Latin ! ) .
52 Speaking at his home at James Street , Falkirk , Graeme explained that before the incident , he had worked for a short spell on a YTS course with ScotRail , before taking a job as a gardener .
53 He rhapsodized about Franklin Roosevelt who , he said , was still regarded " almost as a god in place like West Virginia " , because , although rich , he had worked for the common people .
54 He had worked for the same engineering firm for thirty years and he had always set great store by the company pension .
55 He had worked for the same firm for 16 years without working on a Sunday because of his objection to working on a Sunday and his wish to stay at home and then to go to church .
56 By the time that Orchard made his last will in January 1504 he had married for a second time .
57 William was employed in the Maintenance Department on General Service Duties , a position he had held for the past two years .
58 He was detected at the check-out point before he had paid for the joint and later convicted of theft contrary to section 1(1) of the Act of 1968 .
59 He 's gone for the narrow side he 's tried to squeeze it in the in the near post when he 'd got all the far post to go for .
  Previous page   Next page