Example sentences of "[noun pl] [unc] [noun sg] [pers pn] [vb past] " in BNC.

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1 In the end she suggested that I should just come and listen , and for politeness ' sake I agreed .
2 During her 13 months ' service she escorted more than 700 ships across the world 's beleaguered oceans , without loss of a single one .
3 ‘ The lasagne 's fine , ’ she murmured as she played for time and thought of the three months ' mortgage she had to find and how impossible she would find it to pay one months ' mortgage , let alone three , if she did n't have a job .
4 There was the largest hornets ' nest he had ever seen , hanging right in his path .
5 At Engineers ' Hall we listened to experts like D. A. D. Reeve , chief executive of the Severn Trent Water Authority , D. Gaulter , director general of the Federation of Civil Engineering Contractors , and W. T. Devenay , director of water , Strathclyde Regional Council .
6 When I were at the parents ' evening I said does that mean er he never sits still and he 's always tearing about and
7 To the crews ' embarrassment I stumped up on the bridge wearing the eye patch and the parrot on my shoulder with the added embellishment of an iron hook up the loose sleeve of my coat , to take Venturous alongside in full view of a crowd of holidaymakers lining the pier who , although somewhat mystified , obviously enjoyed the show .
8 For appearances ' sake I maintained the fiction that I was setting up an independent enterprise in the EFL field .
9 With the pilots ' help we telephoned Porto to find that there was CB activity forecast for the rest of the day .
10 After the banks ' nationalisation he sold most of his interests in the dozen or so companies he had created and drawn his wealth from , and committed himself to combating the existing political system .
11 About three weeks ' pay he had taken from Rab .
12 The gleaming black exterior with the polished silver lamp-brackets and the forbidding curtains within that could be drawn to hide its occupants from prying stares told him it was a mourners ' carriage he had spent the night in .
13 Actually , I missed some good ones in the couple of days ' holiday I took ; if I 'd just bothered to look at a single fucking news-stand after I left Stromeferry I 'd have seen this story starting to break about this guy — ‘ The Red panther ’ the tabloids decided on eventually — murdering these right-leaning pillars of the community .
14 After a few days ' dialling he knew it by heart .
15 In two days ' time we reached Pakoku where many of the Anglo-Burmans begged me to disembark and try to walk out of Burma with them , but Rachel was still very sick and I said I would go on to Mandalay and hope to find a doctor there .
16 Nicholson , while rejecting Corman as his ‘ mentor ’ gladly acknowledges the start and subsequent ten years ' work he gave him .
17 After three years ' work he submitted a draft only to have it irrevocably vetoed without any intelligible reasons given or any consideration of amendment .
18 In a hundred years ' time , I said to him , wrote Harsnet ( and Goldberg , putting the pad aside , began to type again ) , in a hundred years ' time I said to him , ( he typed ) no one will remember either you or me .
19 After Franco 's death and after 38 years ' absence he returned to Spain in 1977 , at the invitation of Suárez , and was in 1978 appointed president of the Catalonian regional government .
20 Milton Keynes is about as far from the sea as it is possible to get in England , and Roger Mason 's motivation in coming to us was never quite clear to me ( perhaps it was n't to him either , for although after four intensive years ' research he produced a many-hundred page ‘ draft ’ of his thesis , far in excess of what might be required , he finally failed to submit it for examination ) .
21 ‘ Just for old times ' sake I went , not that there is much to see !
22 After fifteen minutes ' work he had found nothing of interest .
23 After a few minutes ' walk it seemed she had truly left the hamlet of Pook 's Common behind .
24 After a few minutes ' walk I arrived at the edge of the wooded area ; in front of me was about two hundred yards of grass , rising to the high ground covered by thick gorse and ferns .
25 So he come in here he said Iris is putting those Ferrero Rocher things out onto the , onto the birds ' table he said , she do n't like them .
26 After a few hours ' rest I had something to eat .
27 Changi Jail was still there , though , together with the old sergeants ' mess he 'd known 40 years earlier .
28 But our rate was fixed , the girls 's rate We worked for a fixed rate .
29 It was n't like that at my hubby 's last Kirk , telling you the Young Mothers ' Meeting we had there was Really Radical .
30 The first freshers ' dinner I went to in Oxford — this is where the the people who 've just come up erm are introduced to college life and so on — erm the amount that 's allocated to each student is two sherries before dinner , three or four glasses of wine , different wines , with dinner and then something or other — port — after dinner .
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