Example sentences of "[vb past] [pron] [adj] for [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Whether , for instance , concepts such as ‘ ethnicity ’ , ‘ class ’ , ‘ politics ’ are ‘ culture-free ’ , that is whether academics have succeeded in freeing them from their narrow everyday cultural uses and made them available for cross-cultural use , is a question of judgement and , ultimately , of ontology . |
2 | She told some lies about the close relations between the old malai half of the island and ours which had , she said , made them indistinguishable for all practical purposes : for example , it was not an invasion but a reunion . |
3 | well you got them four for ninety nine and you enjoyed them did n't you ? |
4 | Almost immediately after 5 Corps entered southern Austria , it found itself responsible for hundreds of thousands of surrendered enemy personnel , camp followers and civilian refugees , of many different nationalities . |
5 | American Express found themselves responsible for hundreds of barking duffel bags . |
6 | I am quite pleased that Auckland fly-half Grant Fox has changed his mind and made himself available for international action . |
7 | In 1892 he began an involvement with Earls Court , by laying out the grounds for the international horticultural exhibition ; but the industrial exhibition of 1894 , of which he was a director , was a financial failure , and Milner made himself responsible for some of the debts . |
8 | The words were insignificant , but there was something in his tone that made her happy for some reason . |
9 | You also told me that for eleven years you were national coach and team manager to the United Arab Emirates . |
10 | He also told me that for some years , two unknown people , evidently strategically placed in big City offices , have been collecting for us all the first-day covers received there . |
11 | The three judges each scored it 100–86 for Panamanian Duran who was stopped in the sixth round by Pat Lawler in his last fight in March , 1991 . |
12 | Cairnpapple is one of the most important archaeological sites in Scotland and was where prehistoric man worshipped and buried his dead for 3000 years . |
13 | Then , on the eve of the second Test in Madras , Gooch had his infamous encounter with a poisonous prawn that laid him low for several days and was out of the match with diarrhoea and sickness that laid him low for several days . |
14 | Then , on the eve of the second Test in Madras , Gooch had his infamous encounter with a poisonous prawn that laid him low for several days and was out of the match with diarrhoea and sickness that laid him low for several days . |
15 | Well it made him drowsy for one thing , it kept knocking him out . |
16 | ‘ The beauty and interesting nature of this little bird ’ , Gould wrote , ‘ naturally made me anxious to bring home living examples ; I accordingly captured about twenty fully fledged birds , and kept them alive for some time ; but the difficulties necessarily attendant upon travelling in a new country rendering it impracticable to afford them the attention they required , I regret to say the whole were lost . ’ |
17 | I kept them interested for half an hour and now I ca n't even remember what I said . |
18 | The question kept her awake for several hours while she repeatedly reminded herself that it could only bring her heartache . |
19 | At last Monday 's weekly London tea auction , prices reached their highest for three years . |
20 | His quality of ruthless innocence rendered him unsuitable for most human intercourse . |
21 | Admittedly there was only a single bed but that was fine by us ; we kept it warm for each other as we were doing shifts of two hours each . |
22 | Though he did other broadcasts , Snagge was particularly fond of the Boat Race , which he made his own for forty years . |
23 | He was well-read and clever , and he made it easy for stupid men to respect his intellect if he thought they could be of use to him . |
24 | These peaks and troughs made it impossible for developing countries to plan ahead . |
25 | As well as strengthening the role of governors , the 1986 Act made it impossible for political nominees to control governing bodies , as they often had in the past , while the 1988 Act transfers the management of most schools from local education authorities ( LEAs ) to the individual school . |
26 | This made it impossible for those who did advance reform proposals , such as Panin under Catherine II and Pahlen under Alexander I , to organize united pressure upon the Tsar to compromise his authority . |
27 | Swan seemed unwilling to fly very close to these creatures from another world , and this made it impossible for Little Billy to see them clearly . |
28 | No mourners followed but an unmarked car appeared in the road and made it impossible for any vehicle to tail the hearse . |
29 | It was this same moral , ethical dimension which finally , after September 1939 , made it impossible for Nizan to remain working within the ranks of that same party . |
30 | The military crisis of the early 1740s ( see pp. 290ff ) made it impossible for this situation to continue . |