Example sentences of "[noun pl] [vb past] on [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Three identical aprons hung on a crooked coatstand . |
2 | His lips took on a wry slant . |
3 | Like the rest , the ex-Croydon cars took on the visible signs of war , headlamp masks , white collision fenders and protective netting on the windows . |
4 | His eyes took on a dreamy expression and by the time I had intoned " Archibald , Marshall , English , Mc Phail and Morton , " there was something near to a wistful smile on his lips . |
5 | The shops took on a new lease of life , the street-sellers , with their lemonade and nougat , ostrich feathers , mummy-beads and scarabs , carnations and roses , and the street-artists , with their boa-constrictors and baboons , took new heart , and the city in general resumed its normal manic rhythm . |
6 | A glimpse of rough woodland carpeted with bluebells and wild garlic could be seen beyond a daisy-sprinkled lawn ; a wisp of smoke spiralled up from the trees ; voices carried on the still air . |
7 | I heard the sound of voices carried on the thin air . |
8 | My father 's feelings towards the General were , naturally , those of utmost loathing ; but he realized too that his employer 's present business aspirations hung on the smooth running of the house party — which with some eighteen or so people expected would be no trifling affair . |
9 | For some weeks their lives took on a settled pattern of difference . |
10 | ‘ All those models carried on the same way the artists did . |
11 | For some time before this heavy clouds had increased and in the west the sky had become a dense purplish-black , a range of mountainous cumulus against which the outlines of buildings took on a curious clarity and the trees stood out livid and sickly bright . |
12 | The corridors took on an eerie silence . |
13 | Grigorovich 's simplistic , ideological heroes took on a new dimension when danced with such dramatic appeal , with such virility , such fabulous jumps . |
14 | Pillars , walls , ceiling , all have been painted , and there are even paintings hung on the upper walls of the nave above the arches , which are a mixture of round and pointed . |
15 | As the formality of adoption receded into past history , leaving the same accumulation of problems , hope began to wane and problems took on a different perspective . |
16 | They heard the horn again , the sound of hounds carried on the still air . |
17 | In the flickering candlelight , the withered features took on a grotesque appearance . |
18 | Railways , Spearman went on , had the power to break local strikes , as they had done in a recent coal strike in the United States , and the operating officers and freight-yard superintendents took on a military-style power . |
19 | For the next half hour the rehearsals took on a sudden lift and everyone began to dare to try things out without feeling foolish . |
20 | So her waking hours took on a new format . |
21 | These forums had been held before the move was considered to provide lines of communication between management and staff but , the company notes , these meetings took on a new usefulness when the relocation was announced . |
22 | Suddenly , his inability to attract friends took on a new significance . |
23 | The committee men took on a new authority . |
24 | However , in mid-1940 , just about the time of Dunkirk — but quite unconnected with it expansion of the milk supply to children took on a new urgency as the Ministry of Food belatedly worked out a national food policy for an island race threatened by the submarine . |
25 | However , the golf reports took on a new look when supplied by Jack Webb in the two or three years before his death . |
26 | In an organisation where a lot of people , through necessity or personal choice , were cut off from their families or friends at home , mail and letters took on a special importance . |
27 | Haslemere Border road runners took on a windy and hilly course at Cranleigh last Sunday . |
28 | Their faces took on a different expression ; they grew more spruce and upright of bearing , ceased to loll about on the tables or against the walls , and held themselves up . |
29 | At dinner the two cholerics carried on a huddled conversation while I sat at the end of the row feeling the cutlery might melt in my hands . |
30 | Both it and the Tories took on a joint gamble when the Sun talked up the ‘ independence in Europe ’ line . |