Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb past] [prep] a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It is overladen with tear-jerking moments , most of them centred on a big eyed calf that Crystal , roped in as mid- wife , delivers onscreen in the film 's only spot of blood and gore .
2 All of them lived with a nervous expectation that it could happen to them .
3 Bartlemas had an enormous private income , and the pair of them lived in a tall Victorian house in Islington , which was filled to the brim with play-bills , prints , prompt copies , figurines and other souvenirs of their two heroes .
4 Some of them lived in a rented house , while the Taiwan Ten took over the garage and yard .
5 In my own section , towards the middle of the cloakroom , I saw to my horror two lines of girls staring at me and giggling , and as I came near , one of them asked in a sarcastic voice where I came from .
6 Most of them moved towards a similar view of the pacifist tendencies of modern capitalism to that expounded by Norman Angell .
7 These are ancient divisions of the territory , recognized for centuries past as distinct pays , but you are unlikely to find them entered on a modern map , so I should apologize for introducing what will seem like obsolete names .
8 Houses to accommodate them rose as a compact group south of the churchyard , and the church itself was soon ambitiously transformed to provide the setting for an elaborate cycle of daily worship .
9 When I became in a conscious way feminist I pondered long what it meant that a woman could not in such a way depict Christ as being in her image .
10 The reason I asked for a preserved pension obviously to see whether there was any preserved benefits .
11 I asked after a long pause .
12 With this in mind , I applied for a post-registration course , and eagerly looked forward to benefiting from a new , challenging and mature approach to nurse education .
13 Raking through the out-of-date but always interesting ‘ History ’ shelves at a local second-hand bookshop several days later , I chanced upon a thirteen-year-old volume , titled Sieges of the Great Civil War , by Brigadier Peter Young and Wilfrid Emberton .
14 One day I chanced upon a chubby black and white brute molesting a helpless young sparrow and rushed to the rescue .
15 I kept wandering around for a few hours , with no idea where I was or where I was going , then somewhere along the line I chanced upon an open space where there was the odd bench scattered here and there and I used one of these for my lie-down .
16 One of the first books I read as a young adult was A G L Fisher 's History of Europe .
17 Of the other two paintings , one is a picture of a friend , a girl who was also a student , posing in the same life-room , and the other , a portrait I made of a fellow student and good friend of mine from the Royal Academy , James Tower , who became a noted ceramicist .
18 I repeat a proposition that I made to a previous Leader of the House .
19 Well this highlights my point I made in a previous message … how many of the above transfers out can you say we should have got more ?
20 I wanted to become a reporter because I lusted after a belted trenchcoat like the one Joel McCrea wore in Hitchcock 's Foreign Correspondent .
21 In Chapter 2 I argued in a similar vein that the concept of an ontological existent involves the idea of non-arbitrariness , in the sense that by positing something as an ontological existent , i.e. as existing in its own right and not merely as an object of someone 's thought , we are by implication positing this something as a potential subject of a nun-arbitrary subset of predicates from among an indefinite number of meaningful predicates .
22 I argued in an earlier section of this Chapter that questions of value have always had an uncertain place in institutional literary study , and Catherine Belsey explicitly seeks to banish them .
23 For the first two months I lived with a French family in Fontainebleau and studied with a Commandant Lettaure , who was coaching fifteen other young Englishmen .
24 I lived with an elderly lady in a little thatched cottage which looked like something out of Hansel and Gretel .
25 I lived in a small village in Essex with my sister , who was over twenty years older than me , and married to Joe Gargery , the village blacksmith .
26 I lived in a small , second floor flat with my father , my mother being dead , which overlooked a small , noisy courtyard .
27 Finances were riding along the crest of a slump and I lived in a one-room penthouse in Bakers Arms , Leyton ( on top of the opticians ) .
28 I lived in a large house converted into flats .
29 I lived in a different house , read different books , played different games and so on , and , despite various efforts , could not become popular .
30 And I lived in a back-to-back houses , and concrete floors , no no carpets on .
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