Example sentences of "[pron] [det] [vb past] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The public 's response was so overwhelming that the procession of cars , which each carried two team members , was halted several times as fans surged around the cars asking for autographs , shaking hands and giving the occasional kiss .
2 He had pleaded guilty to two misdemeanor charges which each carried maximum sentences of one year in prison and $100,000 in fines , but he had been treated leniently because he had co-operated with independent prosecutor Lawrence E. Walsh , whose Iran-contra investigation was in its final stages .
3 Indeed , successful labour organisation could have been more firmly based on unions which each combined many skills within a single industry , rather than of related functions in a wide range of businesses .
4 If you think about it , this is a naive question , since it would be possible ( in theory ) to construct a TV schedule to get 100 TVRs by using 100 spots which each achieved one TVR or by using four spots each of which achieved 25 TVRs .
5 And the different dynamics of RENFE and BR as organizations , reflecting , for example , the very different ways in which each internalized political pressure , affected the way in which government objectives were construed and implemented within them .
6 Of the Information and Technology Department by British Aerospace , and that thanks is not used from Apex , it 's also from M S S at or acknowledged it was your efforts and not their that brought that conference about .
7 I even asked her if it was her that smashed that kiosk up !
8 This created an entirely new situation in which few saw any purpose in pursuing the attempt to build the structures envisaged at Leeds .
9 Sahlins , for instance , discussed the way the Hawaiian Islanders experienced the visit of Captain Cook , placing it within their own received cultural categories to give the empirical happening of Cook 's arrival a meaning .
10 What a mind is Mr Kaufman 's , so sure there is nothing to be learned but what it wishes to learn , so serenely confident in its own perfected little judgement of what is a great and complex tragedy .
11 Where the husband 's off-farm job was some considerable distance away then the need for the wife to be able to tackle emergencies on her own assumed greater significance .
12 well those others , three of those , somebody else 's children plus her own ran total riot out in the garden , but I mean there 's not enough people to come round and do spot checks even if they 're allowed , I do n't know whether they 're allowed to , but they 've
13 The appellants , who each made repeated sales at the shop , pleaded not guilty to indictments charging burglary and handling stolen goods as alternatives .
14 The cottages were originally intended to house ‘ four poor widows ’ who each received four shillings a week out of Pheobe 's endowment .
15 Second and third places were shared by J Wing and C Hitchcock who each caught 11 oz .
16 You all had good reason for wanting Henry Phipps dead . ’
17 You 're telling me you 're playing la , he told me he plays in ladies teams , I bet you all had great fun , watching them women bending over table .
18 ‘ I thought you all wore terrible hats . ’
19 Have you all , by the way have you all tried this C D rom thing
20 Judy Rumbold suggested in the Guardian that one of the reasons for the maleness of your work was that you both had domineering mothers .
21 We each had different schemes , but we shared a common purpose .
22 We each played superb golf .
23 Though we each traced individual patterns in our cars , the range of experiences and purposes ( shopping , going for a drive , getting to work ) gave the ‘ content ’ of our journeys much in common .
24 We all knew each other anyway — I 've known Si the bass player and Chris the drummer for years — but it was one of those places where everyone was going at the time , where you could meet other musicians and bounce some ideas around .
25 We all knew each other , and we all had one contact , who we all knew quite well .
26 It happened initially because at that time separatists were few in number , and across the country we all knew each other more or less .
27 It was good to be in a class with so few girls ; there were just three of us among fourteen boys , and as a result we all became good friends without forming any sentimental attachments .
28 We all wore these aprons as a uniform and to protect our own clothes while we were working .
29 ‘ Matilda is the late King 's daughter , Hugh , and we all took that oath to recognise her as the future queen after her brother went down with the White Ship , ’ protested the Prior .
30 We all said good night and Fenella added : ‘ Oh , and thank you , ’ and ignored Lisabeth 's warning glare against fraternizing with the enemy .
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