Example sentences of "was [vb pp] [adv prt] the [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | In a number of cases , grain was carried up the canal to the docks , was transhipped , and promptly retraced its steps along the canal to Saul Junction where it passed onto the Stroudwater Canal . |
2 | And for 1,500 miles it was carried on the current without power , navigational gear or a radio transmitter . |
3 | And tobacco ash was spilt down the front of his evening shirt . |
4 | The following season he made 64 not out as nightwatchman against Trinidad , was moved up the order in the second innings , and responded with 188 ; a year later , in 1943–4 , also against Trinidad , he and John Goddard put on an undefeated 502 for the fourth wicket , at the time the third highest partnership in first-class cricket . |
5 | This type of shift was slit down the back for ease of application and secured with back-tie draw-strings at the neck and waist ; such items were , it is assumed , readily available from the undertaker . |
6 | There was extensive trading in coal , which was brought up the river from Yarmouth , and the rich tracts of land surrounding the town produced a considerable quantity of corn , particularly barley . |
7 | The case was brought in the name of Professor Harry Keen , director of clincial services ( medicine ) at Guy 's hospital , London . |
8 | The site was sold to Vickers for £300,000 in 1946 and thus was brought about the end of a motor racing legend . |
9 | He stresses that the decision was taken on the spur of the moment and that it seemed completely acceptable to everyone there at the time . |
10 | Boyd 's cross was taken on the volley by Ferguson as he deliberately launched himself backwards to make room for a full-blooded shot . |
11 | The following survey was taken on the streets of Bradford . |
12 | A suitable break-point was taken on the death of Magnentius in 353 , and of the reports examined from 334 buildings , no less than 199 offered no satisfactory evidence and it could be argued that the remaining 135 hardly offer a sufficient quantity for any serious statistical study . |
13 | Clare was let off the residential weekend which is a normal part of the selection process and was taken on the strength of her interview and written application . |
14 | So no action was taken on the ideas of the Layfield Committee . |
15 | In 1934 , on the recommendation of Professor Bell , Dean of the Faculty of Music at the University of Cape Town , her school was given a studio in the College of Music and she was taken on the staff of the Faculty of Music . |
16 | I was dismissed from the library , but with a good reference and I was taken on the staff of the local Employment Exchange to ‘ sign on ’ the others . |
17 | Thus evidence was taken on the need for the bill and why it was proposed to deal with problems in a particular way . |
18 | The S.M.O. was of the opinion that this was the third , not second night , and that for twenty-four hours before he was knocked down the patch of consolidation had started forming in Bill Francis 's lung . |
19 | When the iron ore was worked out the township including the school would pack up and move on . |
20 | The foundations of modern archaeology were laid down in the 17th century , and throughout the 17th and 18th centuries emphasis was put on the recording of archaeological monuments , initially as part of general topographical works , but eventually as part of a study of the monuments themselves . |
21 | Dad said I should wait until it stopped snowing so hard , so I watched from the window , and before very long it did ease and I was sent down the cellar for the fuel . |
22 | Much of the iron was sent down the valleys for export through Cardiff and Newport . |
23 | The field , a great grassy plain , was divided down the centre by a huge tilt barrier covered in a black and white canvas . |
24 | Thus was ushered in the era of management in the development game . |