Example sentences of "[was/were] [verb] [pers pn] [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Me and me mam were singing it the other night .
2 They were keeping it a secret and they were going to take him some place where they sold parrots .
3 ‘ You were pushing it a bit today , Fran .
4 The words were leading him the wrong way .
5 If we were paying them a salary then of course it 's up to us whether we have them at sitting at home doing nothing , they would n't they 'd soon get bored with it .
6 He started living lavishly and tried to extort more and more money from the government who were paying him a tax-free pension of $1,050 a month .
7 Whether that was down to the powers that be I do n't know ; perhaps they were teaching me a lesson for daring to complain about where I was put .
8 I never did think they were primitive and they always told the truth ( except when they were teaching me the language ) and were a damn sight more trustworthy than some of the white men we had on the job .
9 Well in the Midland Bank and they were wearing them the last time you were there .
10 I thought we were getting her the one with the drawers one with a lockable cupboard is ,
11 I thought we were getting her the one , but the only thing is the other has got drawers both sides has n't it ? if I remember rightly .
12 I thought you were calling me the bearded wonder then .
13 She told them about her house and that the managers were calling her a thief .
14 They were sending us a message . ’
15 And they rang up , and they said were sending you a list of what we expect to be available in the way of food at Christmas because we always have the same thing .
16 When Edward Thomas entered the History Eighth at St. Paul 's in January 1894 , he was at least seventeen months younger than the seven pupils who had joined the class in the previous July or September and who were to leave it the following June .
17 ‘ If you were to give me a ha'penny I might tell you different ’
18 In 1893 the Forget-me-nots were billed us the ‘ smallest dancers on the variety stage .
19 THE campaigners who took their seasonal message to the banks yesterday were doing them a favour .
20 It was as if I were doing him a big favour .
21 ‘ Just one , ’ she said graciously , managing to make it sound as though she were doing him a big favour .
22 This afternoon you came to my office as if you were doing me a favour .
23 Now you were doing it a very neat way , a quick way , of doing it all in one go , were n't you ?
24 It 's funny how er th trends change , but that was a was quite a common occurrence was that , men feeling ashamed of what they 'd got but trying er er in terms of these magazines giving them as if they were doing you a favour .
25 According to estimates from the office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees ( UNHCR ) and local Red Cross committees , some 2,500,000 people from the former Yugoslavia were displaced by the end of July , and some 10,000 people from Bosnia were joining them every day .
26 These problems and a long evening incarcerated below decks without fresh air were giving her a headache .
27 The uniforms were giving her the once-over .
28 While Hyacinth awarded marks , others , just as predatory , were giving her the eye .
29 The new publishers were giving him a launch party and wanted names for the guest list .
30 When Sara glanced back a few moments later , she saw that five liverymen had descended upon the urchin and were giving him a beating .
  Next page