Example sentences of "[verb] [pn reflx] [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ‘ Well now , Barney , ye may think yerself an old man but I do n't think of meself as such ! ’ he exclaimed testily .
2 ‘ We got ourselves a new ball park , ’ said the man from Detroit .
3 The more fully we have developed ourselves the more cause for such gratitude we will have , and the more we understand the cosmos , particularly by grasping the true nature of detailed parts of it and their place in the total scheme , the more we will appreciate the sheer wonderfulness of it , and arrive at a kind of mystical adoration of it .
4 We 've won ourselves a new world .
5 Then his face contorted in pain , and she knew instinctively with infinite relief that it was the face of a man reluctantly denying himself the sexual release he patently craved by wielding a superhuman control .
6 He tried to find himself a new girl to take his mind off it : some new girl , because Peg had gone wrong .
7 The young James found himself a virtual prisoner of the Red Douglases in Edinburgh castle .
8 Following independence Boudiaf had , like Ait Ahmed , found himself a political exile after opposing FLN rule .
9 Ex-convict Charrièere found himself a huge celebrity when the book sold a million copies in France , two-and-a-half million in America and ten million throughout the world .
10 He had little success , however , in his efforts to persuade the Dutch that Sukarno was a man with whom they could do business and found himself a reluctant pig in the middle , reviled by one side as a fascist imperialist and by the other as an irresponsible revolutionary .
11 There was a gulph [ sic ] between slavery and freedom which could neither be filled up nor closed over and across which the slave must leap ere he alighted on the other side and found himself a free man .
12 When there were not games he disappeared into the library and found himself the only person in the building .
13 Dr Sasaki found himself the only doctor in the hospital who was unhurt .
14 Jeff Winter of Middlesbrough found himself the first guinea pig .
15 Tonight he had been immersed in scenes of Mafia violence and found himself the next moment slumped in the Chesterfield staring at silver snow on the screen .
16 Mr Barker found himself an innocent victim and he was questioned and released .
17 Parr did not consider himself a jealous man , in any way .
18 ‘ T is so no more ’ , that is , he can no longer consider himself the same person — he has become , at last , a human being ( line 36 ) , not a dreaming poet , and he can not go back to the earlier state .
19 He also played cricket , and had already earned himself a bad reputation by smashing two windows in the village .
20 The Emperor takes personal command of his army whenever possible , and has earned himself an impressive record of victories and conquest .
21 Promising young batsman , Ian Place , seems to have booked himself a regular spot in A Division side .
22 Built himself a shit-hot reputation and moved firms three , maybe four times , before the Bang .
23 Only recently he 'd bought more land off the Roscarrocks ( who were selling to pay their church fines ) and built himself a new house made of ship 's beams and red brick , with upstairs rooms , a panelled hall , latticed windows and six curly chimneys .
24 Cambo 's most illustrious resident , attracted there by its salubrity , was the playwright Edmond Rostand , a florid Marseillaise who built himself an extraordinary house just outside the town to the north .
25 He built himself an extraordinary turrety and battlemented house , Strawberry Hill , at Twickenham in Middlesex , and then be wrote a romance , The Castle of Otranto , more or less using the house as a background .
26 Mr Flood was silent and blessed himself a great deal when he heard the news .
27 Maybe he 'd better go and buy himself a new bike , that 's always a good way to break bits of the human body .
28 In 1686 he became a London alderman , sitting for Broad Street ; but he discharged himself the following year , probably in anticipation of the purging of Anglicans from the bench .
29 The BBC again found itself the unwilling accomplice of the advertisers .
30 Secondly , their eyes are on eternal truth , of which each party deems itself the sole defender .
  Next page