Example sentences of "[prep] be [verb] a [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Now you seem to be laying a great deal of stress on the introduction of minimum standards , what , what 's the point behind that and what does it mean ? |
2 | Toby seemed to be gone a long time , but I was n't measuring time very accurately . |
3 | He was to bring Patrick back , any way he could , but the girl — if she was in Dublin — was to be taught a serious and possibly fatal lesson . |
4 | And they like to be taught a new board game |
5 | The very young inmates at Bohorok had to be taught a surprising number of basic skills , such as how to climb and walk upright on a branch , things they would normally have learned from their mothers . |
6 | This hope had been inspired by events in France , where the financier John Law , exiled after a fatal duel , was perceived to be achieving a spectacular unloading of the public debt . |
7 | Since the new forms of treatment set up have not reduced the demand for state hospital admissions and the alternatives so far devised have not guaranteed more cost-effective services , the move into the community can be seen to be reaching a critical stage of development . |
8 | The falsificationist now appears to be reaching a tentative solution to his problem , although he does not consider himself to have proved by experiment how bats avoid collisions while flying . |
9 | However , it is possible that such " cutting " was intentional , in order to create the effect of a movement away from the spectator ( who is seen to be receiving a privileged view ) . |
10 | The green light surrounding them now seemed to be imparting a sick lifeless pallor . |
11 | As I seem to be getting a real thing about digital clip distortion lately , this elevates the Alpha 2.0 on my list of processors to be seen with . |
12 | Judge Peter Greenwood told Hilton : ‘ The supplying of drugs is a very serious offence and you are fortunate to be getting a short sentence . ’ |
13 | I just said to Walt , we ought to be getting a gon-doh-lar back . ’ |
14 | Already the only preserved railway to be operating a regular commercial freight contract jointly with British Rail , the present proposals would lift it to a new level of national importance . |
15 | This is another spot which seems to be enjoying a good run of birds of prey for common buzzard and hen harrier were also there and on Saturday a red kite was seen . |
16 | He seemed to be wearing a dark-coloured suit . |
17 | This male shape or essence seemed to be wearing a white coat ( a medic 's stark white smock ) . |
18 | Or he occasionally buys a er a shirt with a a fine stripe in it , but he says the continentals expect you to be wearing a white shirt . |
19 | If you can imagine being on a steep , snow-covered slope , below which there is a 1000 m ( 3,500 ft ) sheer drop , would you prefer to be wearing a shiny nylon cagoule or a rough old woollen jumper ? |
20 | From what I could see of him — mostly his spectacles and his left arm around the door jamb — he appeared to be wearing a red silk kimono . |
21 | System 3 are meant to be bringing a new game called Silly Putty out . |
22 | But , in those days , to defend the House of Lords was to be dubbed a shameful reactionary . |
23 | Prepare to be led a merry dance — perhaps emotionally , perhaps materially — and prepare also to deal with a series of tough situations . |
24 | I do not mourn for Mr. Fyfe , but is he to be branded a dishonest man because of the Government 's insensitivity in railroading through these unwanted applications ? |
25 | ‘ We are going to be seeing a great deal of him . ’ |
26 | That at a given moment I seem to be seeing a brown patch — this I can not conceivably doubt . |
27 | Mother had seemed to be undergoing a complete personality change , seeking danger and excitement like a reckless teenager ! |
28 | All he could say was that it had to be called a great and profound change , and that it had happened , ‘ I have a feeling of being at home when I am with her , as though she gives me my own hearth , a feeling that our lives are interwoven . ’ |
29 | used to be called a ragged school . |
30 | But it used to be called a ragged school . |