Example sentences of "were [verb] [pron] [noun] [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | In 1338 the northern clergy were to instruct their parishioners about the crucial need for , and inescapable burdens of , defence against the Scots , so that the ‘ pious exhortations ’ of the priests might induce support for a united struggle against the enemies of the realm . |
2 | Soon three spiders were inching their way along the wall towards a small window on the ground floor . |
3 | As it was , some 50,000 soldiers were to lose their lives during the next few months in fruitless attacks on Chunuk Bair . |
4 | The troops were given their briefing in the hall . |
5 | When White and Davies were building their castles in the Midlands , the game was still mostly amateur . |
6 | I was too young to remember him , but later at intervals a number of remarkable men , among them Arnold Hodson , Hugh Dodds and Arthur Bentinck , served on my father 's staff and were to remain our friends over the years . |
7 | Analysts , meanwhile , were not impressed at all , and were downgrading their opinions on the company right , left and centre last week , causing the shares to slip . |
8 | Yes , erm , when Harlow was designed , it was appreciated that its , the , its purpose was to house workers in the factories and the offices and also to act as an overspill from London , and in nineteen sixty when Cossors were bringing their workers by the hundreds |
9 | The new men were not aping the landed gentry ; they were basing their careers upon the infrastructure provided by urban Britain . |
10 | ‘ You were driving your Daimler on the A614 — southbound — at two a.m. yesterday morning . |
11 | That was no exaggeration , Ronni soon discovered , as fifteen minutes later they were winding their way through the narrow , colourful streets of the walled city of Alghero to climb a hill to a cliff-top where they were suddenly confronted by a breath-taking panorama of endless blue sea . |
12 | As he declaimed we were weaving our way through the late-afternoon shoppers who thronged the centre of the town . |
13 | They were walking their horses among the sand-dunes south of the castle , and on their left hand the sea ran high and grey , and the gulls were uneasy , aware of coming wind . |
14 | Suragai and Kadan were walking their st'lyan on the grass where the stream curved away out of sight , each of them with one of the twins in the saddle . |
15 | However , Fleischmann and Pons were announcing their results at the press conference before they had told any of their scientific colleagues . |
16 | Both the DoI and the 600 Group were keeping their information on the effects of robots on employment to themselves . |
17 | Public concern was also heightened on Sept. 29 by an announcement that the prosecuting authorities were ending their investigation into the cases of 12 other politicians , none of whom was named , who had received some of the Sagawa Kyubin money originally given to Kanemaru . |
18 | It was almost as if an invisible hand were pressing his finger against the barrel . |
19 | They had no sooner skidded to a halt , than the crews had the hoses run out and were training their jets on the leaping flames . |
20 | ‘ Before the fight they were chanting my name for the first time and I could see the effect it had on Ruddock , his head was going down while my chest was swelling with pride . |
21 | We all met at a pre-luncheon reception and then adjourned to the dining hall to sample the culinary delights which were to space our classes for the next five days ; four classes with dancing after dinner was the order of the day , all meticulously time-tabled . |
22 | The shoots were pushing their heads above the ground even though the group was still able to claim record profits as late as January of this year . |
23 | One year later she and her husband were expressing their thanks to the Home Support Project for helping them to go on looking after Mrs Cummings at home , and said that although it was still a strain it was ‘ nowhere near as hard as it has been , now that we 've got other people to help us ’ . |
24 | In 1948 , Francis Rogallo and his wife Gertrude were granted their patent for the flexible kite that has been credited so often as the origin of the ‘ modern ’ species . |
25 | If the bonnie banks of Scotland were to open their accounts to the world , there would be a run on the pound and some of the country 's most famous clubs would collapse with embarrassment . |
26 | When Dyer , Brown and Goldstein ( 1970 ) were writing their book in the later 19605 , there was very little practice to guide their comments on non-book media , which were therefore very general , but the importance was recognized and the book made a brave , if insufficient , attempt at a new educational basis for a library programme . |
27 | Members of the Darlington Association on Disability expressed concern about how members were to reach their headquarters at the Friends ' Meeting House in Skinnergate . |
28 | In the minds of those who gave positive thought to it , the Commonwealth was to be an organization to which no one who was unwilling need apply , and in which those who had joined were to reach their decisions on the basis of consensus : the goal to be pursued was an uncoerced acknowledgement of Britain as the senior partner in a world-wide enterprise ; the position to be sought was the supremely equivocal but potentially supreme satisfying one of primus inter pares . |
29 | In the Third World new nations were flexing their muscles for the first time . |
30 | Every one had to be taken out and held down while we picked off the ants that were sinking their jaws between the scales . |