Example sentences of "and [vb past] [pers pn] [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 He immediately took to his heels with is case of cigarettes and led me a merry dance away from the docks , through a council estate , finally finishing up on the perimeter track of Ipswich Airport where I was rescued in the nick of time by a squad car full of policemen just as I was about to be filled in by the burly seaman .
2 We sat them down and gave them a drink and asked them the usual stuff .
3 Bill Williams , a journeyman , witnessed how he had met Day in the Barley Mow at Hungerford , and sold him the incriminating tobacco box .
4 She came down to him and made him a hot drink and felt his forehead which was burning hot and covered in drops of sweat .
5 Is it my fault if the King has spoilt his son and made him a laughing stock in Europe ?
6 Charles I was equally well disposed towards Salisbury and made him a privy councillor in 1626 .
7 With Dawson it was his bulk which undoubtedly contributed to his premature death along with his broad , rubber face that became his trademark and made him an ideal pantomime dame in true bawdy music hall tradition .
8 But his bulk , along with his broad , malleable face , was virtually his trademark and made him an ideal pantomime dame in the finest bawdy music hall tradition .
9 In one act at the exhibition hangar gave NAM ‘ back ’ its workshop , enabling the restoration of Anson C.19 VL348 to come on apace ; it allowed several of their exhibits the luxury of a controlled environment ; gave the Museum an ‘ all weather ’ visitor capability and made them a suitable location for the RAF Museum to loan them their Airspeed Oxford and North American Harvard — see the August issue .
10 I think it 's about time we actually put that word back into the dictionary and made it a good word to have .
11 While nineteenth-century Catholic teaching had been suspicious of ‘ human rights ’ discourse , John embraced it eagerly and made it a central theme , greatly extending the range and number of ‘ rights ’ , including those of minorities ( 95–7 ) and refugees ( 103–8 ) .
12 This position put its schools in the forefront and made it the leading school of Europe from the 1140s , until Paris began to take the lead in theology and philosophy ( but never in law ) in the 1180s .
13 The taxi driver leaned through his window at one point and passed me a small scrap of paper .
14 When the order came she reached down to help an older woman to her feet and passed her the well-wrapped bundle , then she turned her back on the men and was swallowed by the mass of female prisoners .
15 They told me to stay there until they came and got me the following day — which I did n't .
16 Well Julie went and got it the other day that 's why fetched her out , to get their presents .
17 Others said that their driving was risky because friends and , to a lesser extent , the public , police and insurance companies labelled him as ‘ high risk ’ and charged him a high premium , he might as well get his money 's worth .
18 In 1925 the Post Office , which operated independently or through other licensees outside London , went to the length of installing , for a private subscriber in Eastbourne , a free line to St Andrew 's Church 933 yards away , and charged him an annual rental of £1 17 6d ( £1 8712 ) under a three-year contract .
19 The dragon 's tail whipped around as it passed and caught him a stinging blow across the forehead .
20 The drummer lashed out at Tom and caught him a glancing blow on the jaw and Tom had to be held back by Ollie to prevent him retaliating .
21 Grimma took another step forward and caught it a backward thump across the muzzle .
22 Health physics monitor Steven Crozier , a fitness enthusiast who was one of the group who visited Peel Park to collect the 1993 award , tried out the new multi-gym and pronounced it a real asset ( below ) .
23 Unlike Hitler , however , the Americans were anxious for Franco 's consent and found him a reasonable interlocutor .
24 ‘ We obedience-trained him and found him a new home .
25 The head waiter , enchanted to see Ricky after three years ' absence , kissed him on both cheeks , enquired after his elbow , and found him a quiet corner .
26 I found my way to a temperance hotel advertised in the guide-book and found it a homely house .
27 We made the locks at Gairlochy on Saturday evening and found it no great hardship to lay there throughout the following Sunday .
28 The Sinn Fein man claimed two plain-clothes men approached Mr Fox in Thomas Street , Dungannon on September 2 and promised him a new house if he agreed to work for them .
29 I patted Armstrong 's stubbly radiator and promised him a good clean-out .
30 Then Sir Alfred pulled in in his Bentley and promised me a free hand to design a car that worked .
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