Example sentences of "[coord] [prep] [adj] [pers pn] had " in BNC.

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1 to get in , three fifty each and then we paid another six pound , ten P and for that we had popcorn , Minstrels , one large Coke , a lot bigger than that and two small ones , and of course everything 's got like all this on
2 But the poem of his that he most needed reassurance about was Homage to Sextus Propertius ( 1919 ) , and for that he had to wait a long time .
3 Cedric had been just too young for the war , and for this he had never forgiven Fate .
4 Teachers found me irresponsible and anti-social , and for this I had to suffer .
5 The longships were beautiful , and worth all he had paid King Svein of Denmark .
6 And then the shadows moved again , and Lugh could see that there was nothing there at all , and that he was nearer now to Tara than he had thought , and after all it had only been a trick of the light .
7 We managed to do it and after that we had to get the money from people who sponsored us .
8 Various reports a plea for support a plea for interest particularly for the seventy fifth anniversary year next year and after that we had the most lovely party .
9 I used to wear jeans and jackets and shirts but my parents burned them on the same day my dad beat me up , and after that I had to wear saris .
10 But it was her last film and after that I had to make do with Jean Simmons in Desirée .
11 But Simon had never got beyond page 27 , and after that he had merely left the book out in case his mother and stepfather came unexpectedly for drinks .
12 A local craft shop took them and after that she had regular orders for them from outlets further afield .
13 The former Romanian regions of Bessarabia and northern Bukovina had been annexed from Romania in June 1940 in the course of the Soviet advance against the pro-German troops of the Romanian government , and after 1947 they had become the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic ; in practice , the dispute was much older , dating back to Russia 's liberation of the region from Turkish rule in the early 19th century .
14 We had only brief glimpses of the parrot as it flew across gaps in the canopy , and with that I had to be content .
15 The German 's rates differed from girl to girl , and with some he had an arrangement that he received a commission rather than a rent per room ; the advantage here for the girls was that they could pay him at the end of the night , rather than each time they used the room And to ensure they did n't even think about cheating , he employed a " caretaker " whose job was to keep a tally of the girls and their customers .
16 Up to and including 1920 he had been consistently on the left of the Bolshevik Party , and this particular book was his last major offering from that stance before his subsequent evolution to the ‘ right ’ of the party .
17 And above all she had her mother 's pride and hardness .
18 and from 1918 they had a parliamentary majority of their own , with three times as many seats as the rest of the coalition , but they never held as many as half of the government posts .
19 As Under-Secretary of the Navy in Wilson 's administration from 1913 , he had warmly supported American entry into the First World War , and in 1919 he had wanted the USA to join the League of Nations .
20 Salieri had never got on with Leopold II , and in 1790 he had been released from most of his court obligations , remaining as a kind of honorary kapellmeister .
21 I I think you were all here listening to the erm pensioners before you were they were talking about their ideas which were also our ideas in our er report on the designated ownership of , of the pension funds and in particular they had a couple of ideas which you may have heard about having the word pension in the in the names , just technical points , er pension in the names of er of the funds and and people who were er giving advice on behalf of them .
22 In 1905 , at age 48 , he walked 200 yards , ran 200 yards , cycled 200 yards , rowed 200 yards and swam 200 yards , all in under a total of eight minutes , and in 1903 he had swum five miles in the Thames ( two of them against the tide ) .
23 On one occasion she threw him on the floor and on another she had deliberately broken his toys .
24 He was still ‘ hooking ’ , putting in the glasses and titling on 8th and on 10th he had nearly finished the lettering on the sign .
25 And to this she had answered , ‘ I suppose I can do what I like with my own money . ’
26 And at that he had gone out .
27 It was dreary beyond belief , and at first it had the effect of offsetting his own emotional night .
28 It had , however , been the only one that Rory had been able to lay hold of , and at first he had been proud of it .
29 They had Nelson Mandela giving a rally at two in the afternoon on the steps of City Hall or wherever it was , and at three they had a colour photograph of him out on the streets .
30 She had been a feature writer here for two years and at twenty-five she had already made a name for herself .
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