Example sentences of "[adj] he [verb] [adv] the " in BNC.

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1 In order to do this he followed up the material throughout its various processes , and plotted its progress on a chart or series of charts .
2 Trance-like he drove down the Edgware Road , responding to the multitudinous traffic lights with mechanical movements , while the agitated Eleanor continued to lash his unreceptive ear with a never-ending stream of abuse .
3 In 1684 he turned over the retail side of his business to Francis Saunders and his partner Joseph Knight .
4 On his father 's death in 1867 he took over the business , and in the 1871 census he was described as ‘ chemist and dealer in foreign stamps ’ .
5 In 1236 he had both the honour of carrying the sceptre at the queen 's coronation , and the disgrace of imprisonment through a court cabal .
6 In 1984 he took over the occupancy of 84 acres of land near Gosforth in Tyne and Wear which was owned by the Ashdale Land and Property Company .
7 By 1984 he plucked up the courage ( or obtained the permission ) to do the two things he really wanted : make wine from Pinot Gris ( originally a Burgundian grape ) as a Burgundian would , fermenting and maturing it in ( partly new ) French oak barriques ; and stop filtering his dry white wines .
8 In 1764 he wrote there the first Gothic novel , The Castle of Otranto , which , in his Description of Strawberry Hill , he connects directly with the house : ‘ A very proper habitation of , as it was the scene that inspired , the author .
9 He built his first car by the time he was 18. in 1909 he took over the Molsheim factory near Strasbourg and set about developing the greatest racing car in the world .
10 But he 'd made sure he knew where the quarry lived .
11 Ludwitt comes back , all the neighbours are clustering around trying to get in , Ludwitt , first of all he sends away the neighbours
12 Jim was all for going on , for expanding , for advancing rather than retreating , but Cliff was beginning to think that after all he had n't the temperament for it , he could n't stand the anxiety , he did n't enjoy the suspense : all he wanted was security , independence , freedom from worry , being his own man .
13 In 1952 he took over the captaincy from Michael Barton .
14 Mann considered these objective to be so important that in January 1897 he gave up the secretaryship of the Independent Labour Party which he had held since 1894 to devote himself to the continental agitation , especially in Rotterdam , Antwerp and Hamburg , which had been started in the previous year .
15 He earned his first Chair , at Southampton , in 1972 , and in 1981 he took up the oldest and most senior Chair of Archaeology in Britain , the Disney Professorship at Cambridge , where he is presiding over a great expansion of archaeological studies there with the creation of the Macdonald Institue for Archaeological Research .
16 In 1911 he won both the British Open at Sandwich and the German Open .
17 In 1958 he took over the running of the Horncastle Maltings , which , after a series of ownerships was acquired by .
18 By so differentiating he described both the characteristics of his villagers and the typical gestures which enabled them to tell their tale ( see page 59 ) .
19 As always , the risk element was the icing on the cake as far as he was concerned He breathed in the fine night air and hummed the tune of Colonel Bogey in time with his silent footsteps .
20 First he scratched away the plaster , then he tried to pull out the bricks .
21 Yet he was not at this stage prepared to risk open war on their behalf ; although he disliked the peace of 1328 he had neither the resources nor the general political support for a renewal of the Scottish war .
22 In 1441 he took over the work from two Venetian architects and supervised the work for the next three decades .
23 On 2 April 1746 he gave up the attempt and headed hastily north ‘ in a great hurry and confusion ’ .
24 Before turning professional in 1970 he won both the British Youth and English Amateur Championships .
25 At p. 254 he explained how the judges were using a power derived from the Crown as the fountain of justice when they conferred authority on the benchers of the Inns of Court to act as their delegates in maintaining the discipline of the Bar .
26 In 1986 he took over the captaincy from Fletcher and led them to their third championship in four years , but early in 1987 he suffered a bad loss of form and the team slipped right down the table .
27 With that he snatched up the bottle and flung it through the open window into the yard .
28 In 1951 he took on the vice-presidency of the newly formed Musician 's Organization for Peace .
29 However , in 1855 he took up the post of professor of drawing at King 's College , London , which he combined with book illustration .
30 He could see that refrigeration would bring about a complete change in people 's lifestyles and in 1880 he took over the patents of the Bell–Coleman cold-air machine and developed what was known as the dry air refrigerator .
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