Example sentences of "[adj] [noun pl] looking for [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | He is now concentrating on providing M&A services to Japanese clients looking for acquisitions in Europe , Japanese clients looking for domestic acquisitions and European clients looking for Japanese acquisitions . |
2 | Chairman Garry Gibson revealed that Murray had been in touch with a string of top clubs looking for pre-deadline newcomers . |
3 | A racing stables looking for warm and healthy bedding for its horses has found the answer in yellow pages … quite literally . |
4 | British manufacturers looking for new product lines are being targeted by former US funeral company director . |
5 | He is now concentrating on providing M&A services to Japanese clients looking for acquisitions in Europe , Japanese clients looking for domestic acquisitions and European clients looking for Japanese acquisitions . |
6 | While many collectors are turning over every hedge and collective barn they can find within the Russian Republic and its former constituents and satellites for hidden treasures , a small and dedicated band have been scouring the Asia-Pacific region for many decades looking for Japanese material . |
7 | The British Invasion was underway , but the women were still good girls looking for great guys — Cilla , Sandie , Dusty , Lulu — while the blues boom lads were getting laid and getting all the plaudits . |
8 | She scoured the streets in the poorer areas looking for likely candidates and then , knowing the reality of poverty , taught them the rules of hygiene in her own way , which the Girls would imitate and laugh at behind her back . |
9 | Newcastle looked better in the second half , slogging their way forward in the heavy conditions looking for agoal . |
10 | My master , of course , ambled along like a child and I had to keep him away from the rufflers , those former soldiers looking for easy pickings , the mad Abraham men who danced naked pretending to be insane , the cappers who begged for money and attached horse-locks to the outstretched arms of people stupid enough to give it . |
11 | Stewarts and Lloyds , the chief promoters of Corby 's growth , imported contingents of Scottish workers , and young men looking for secure jobs came with their wives on the train from Glasgow that came to be called the ‘ honeymoon express ’ . |