Example sentences of "and [v-ing] [pers pn] on the [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Have I said something , then ? ’ he asked , taking off his cap and overcoat and hanging them on the door peg .
2 ‘ Like some coffee ? ’ said Wilcox , taking her coat and hanging it on the back of the door .
3 Then one morning I did not go early for my paper , and seeing it on the mat Cedric brought it to me .
4 Like tying a bottle on the door and sticking it on the window and knock the door and they had to come , crash the bottle would go .
5 After a quick wash she dragged on an old pair of jeans and an equally ancient navy sweater before emptying the bucket and replacing it on the dresser .
6 I remember boiling the milk and pouring it on the tea leaves .
7 Would you say that cutting meat and getting it on the shelf every day , takes your department forward ?
8 Trrrrrrrrrrrrrfffaow ! ’ and kicking it on the run , blasting a dirty fountain of sand and jelly up and around mc .
9 Turning to Omi , skilfully bringing her into the conversation , and complimenting her on the way the venison had been cooked .
10 ‘ I was , ’ he told her , snatching the blanket from his shoulder and spreading it on the ground .
11 ‘ Daddy , darling , ’ Alyssia said , smiling genuinely for the first time since she had stepped foot back on to English soil and kissing him on the tip of his nose , ‘ in your own cantankerous way , you 've put your finger right on the button . ’
12 ‘ She will , ’ said the Sheikh , rising to greet his mother and kissing her on the forehead , the kiss of respect , of the younger for the elder .
13 ‘ I am sorry to hear it , ’ said Theda , dragging her attention back and focusing it on the lady .
14 But , as a spokesman for the UN 's International Maritime Organisation said ‘ there 's nothing to stop a tanker 's skipper dumping oil and blaming it on the war ’ .
15 And joining me on the journey was a never-ending line of lumbering construction plant , Brobdingnagian concrete-mixers , and juggernauts laden with rocks and sand .
16 It 's ten minutes past nine and joining us on the line this morning is er Judy in York good morning Judy .
17 Its sudden reappearance , a product of the uncertain economic times in Eastern Europe , at first seemed easily explained , but whether it was wartime booty or a token of gratitude , whether a museum who may or may not have owned it wanted it back or not , whether it was legally correct or amoral , by putting it up for auction ( and illustrating it on the catalogue cover ) Sotheby 's assured themselves of one thing : whatever they did would be wrong .
18 She kept walking round her box , sighing , and picking bits out of her haynet and dropping them on the floor .
19 They started doing ‘ breakdown ’ [ lifting the boys above their heads and dropping them on the ground ] .
20 the notion of getting hold of a sort of re a perceived object and dropping it on the floor and watching it split into it 's component parts is quite appealing If you take a , if you imagine , you could take an object that you 're perceiving , yes ?
21 I fell asleep and remember him lifting me off and putting me on the settee cushion but I 'd had a tiring evening and hardly stirred .
22 It , it , it just went on for a lit a short time afterwards but er , but when the war ended course things , some things changed pretty rapidly as you can appreciate but , but by this time I , I was working for Ellwells then on long distance transport and we used to have to go and fetch tractors or bulldozers that had got armour plating on from Dagenham docks and bring them up here and start selling them to civic contractors and the , the Americans were selling a lot of equipment as well at end of the war , and I saw money made overnight like , people were buying the lorries and putting them on the road you know for work and transport firms and all that and they were getting some of them for next to nothing
23 I think we all feel we would like more central capital funding , but without it , it 's quite proper that we make er the best of use of the , of the assets we 've got , and we were n't using all our estate as effectively as we might , so for the last few years , we 've had a very vigorous programme of identifying land and buildings that are no longer required , and putting them on the market and thereby enabling us to build new facilities .
24 Mrs Foster bobbed about collecting the items and putting them on the counter .
25 ‘ I have n't the faintest , ’ said Shirley , taking off her outdoor shoes and putting them on the rack , putting on her indoor slippers , and guiltily , belatedly , bending down to wipe the shoe marks off the linoleum with spit and hanky .
26 ‘ And there 's some shortbread and chocolates and a jar of chicken breasts , ’ she said , taking them out of the basket and putting them on the table .
27 Mrs Blakey was already bustling about , taking butter from the fridge and putting it on the edge of the Aga to soften , taking a sliced loaf from the bread-bin .
28 ‘ Try harder , ’ he appealed and , taking her wine glass from her and putting it on the table , he drew her close .
29 Taking the score out of my brief-case and putting it on the podium : that is not my way .
30 Lean forward as you rise As in the beach start , by leaning down on a straight front arm you are taking the weight off the back of the board and putting it on the mast foot .
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