Example sentences of "[verb] [prep] [art] [adj] [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | FOUR months after attending a weekend course on team building and sales training , staff from Treasury and Capital Markets , Scotland met for a day-long follow-up session in the conference room at Drummond House . |
2 | As the Cabinet met for an unprecedented late-night session , Mr Major was searching for a way out of the deadlock that would help Chancellor Norman Lamont unveil a mini-Budget for recovery next week . |
3 | As the Cabinet met for an unprecedented late-night session , Mr Major was searching for a way out of the deadlock that would help Chancellor Norman Lamont unveil a mini-Budget for recovery next week . |
4 | A common example was an auxiliary verb sequence , such as I would n't have been able to go , which was heard as a single syllabic beat , approximately shown here as I wudnbinabluh go . |
5 | I had heard about the new economic empires of the East : Japan , Korea , Taiwan , Singapore , Malaysia … yet it was a surprise to realise how fast these giants are probing their tentacles deep into Sarawak 's ‘ Heart of Darkness ’ . |
6 | Women heard about the different educational method used in the five phrenological schools that had beer founded by William Ellis in the 1850s . |
7 | Have you heard about the Tory moderate who hit the cheerful-looking palmist on the nose ? |
8 | They returned to the room where she explained about Philpott 's heart attack and his subsequent convalescence at the Bellevue Hospital where he would remain for the next few days . |
9 | It endorsed British industry 's achievements under the policies that we have been pursuing for the past 12 years , urged us to continue and build upon them in future and condemned utterly the sort of policies still advocated by the Labour party , which is stuck in a mind-set of the 1960s and 1970s . |
10 | We squelched through the oozy wet mud of the long sea wall at Titchwell Marsh . |
11 | You would n't think for a dainty little thing would you ? |
12 | In fact he had fully intended to wait for a suitable moonlit warm right , but the trying events of the day had put him so out of sorts that he could stand the waiting no longer . |
13 | The Lancashire skipper then had to wait for a tense two minute trial by television to decide whether he could continue his burgeoning innings . |
14 | Sam , without any hesitation had agreed knowing that to wait for the first available fireman would delay his train 's departure . |
15 | Without such action by the judge , Intel would have to wait for the new 80287 trial to be completed before the company could file any appeal . |
16 | And now we are to wait for the next ethnic war to intervene to salve our pitifully insensitive consciences and our failure to shape and conduct an effective policy : a neat one , no complications , allowing intervention with few , possibly no , losses . |
17 | But when the money runs out and they ca n't afford to pay for any more care patients have to wait for the next financial year . |
18 | She was heavily pregnant but she was questioned and made to wait for the next twelve hours without food or water . |
19 | Weather conditions precluded this , so he had to wait for the next scheduled plane from Wick to Kirkwall . |
20 | Messiaen began composing at the age of seven , entering the Paris Conservatoire four years later where he was to remain for the next 11 years , winning four premiers prix including that for composition in 1930 . |
21 | Such was my father 's introduction to Abyssinia where , except for three periods of leave , he was to remain for the next ten years . |
22 | Early on , she demanded from each member a list of the people they had consulted during the previous three months . |
23 | My horse is kept at a lovely yard 13 miles away : too far for many people 's choice , but the facilities and the people compensate for the 20 minute drive . |
24 | The fans are still hoping the terraces will be filled for a bright new future to come . |
25 | JOHN ROLFE and Adrian Breton will be competing for a British Olympic place at the weekend when the rapid fire pistol match in the World Cup Tournament in Los Angeles will be the decider for Barcelona , writes Leslie Howcroft . |
26 | East European countries are thus competing for the best western companies just as western companies are competing for contracts . |
27 | For any given program there is an optimum or efficient memory usage for an environment in which many programs are competing for the limited available real memory . |
28 | They need a new identity , but in seeking it they find themselves competing for the same political space with social movements that share their radical vocation . |
29 | So erm how did it , did you stay for the full six months or did it er extend further than that ? |
30 | Our fascinating day among the gentle giants is completed by a drive down to Los Angeles where we will stay for the next two nights in the Anaheim area of the city . |