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

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1 Coming from eighty throats , it swept with them down from the wooded foothills and made them sound like a flock of scavenging birds disturbed from their carcass .
2 McKellar 's subjects " … quite frequently likened the images to lantern slides … " and furthermore their unrelatedness both to current preoccupations and to each other made them seem like a series of lecturer 's slides which had not only " … been mixed up but were really intended for some other lecture " .
3 He defended himself vigorously in a series of letters , protesting — in this case to the journalist William Archer — that ‘ The very last charges I expected them to bring against a book concerned merely with the doom of hereditary temperament & unsuitable mating in marriage were that it was an attack on marriage in general , that it was immoral , & that characters who recant their opinions & come to a sad end were puppets invented to express my personal views in their talk . ’
4 The anxiety of the Tsar and Tsarina to shield their haemophiliac son led them to withdraw into a narrow family circle , incurring the displeasure of members of high society .
5 The idea of a one-woman tribute was conceived five years ago , when larger-than-life director Bryan Izzard asked me to contribute to a Channel Four programme on the monologue called The Eye Of The Little Yellow Dog , starring , amongst others , the late Leonard Rossiter , Cilla Black , Alec McCowen , Diane Langton , Anita Harris and Ronald Lacey .
6 Caduta asked me to come to an address in Little Italy at two o'clock that afternoon .
7 I could understand the term ‘ genetic engineering ’ — well , as long as nobody asked me to speak for a minute without hesitation or deviation — and I recognized ‘ DNA ’ , which was said to be the basic stuff of life .
8 This may be connected to the fact that the youngsters came bottom as far as hugs were concerned , as 57pc said their parents hugged them compared with a national average of 70pc .
9 ‘ One morning they woke me up , told me to wash my face , and led me blindfolded into a room with a TV camera .
10 When they were bulging-full , he stitched them closed with a curved needle and woollen thread and laid them ready in a pile .
11 That made me move in a hurry .
12 It made me forget for a moment how low sales figures so often are nowadays , as there are some exciting campaigns planned , some clever gimmicks , some expensive promotions and , more important , some wonderful books .
13 He was the ideal of all the friends I had ever longed for , the elder brother that , as an only child , I could never hope for — though he was at least fifteen years younger than I , his assurance and absolute maleness made me feel like a younger brother by contrast .
14 Sheila , who said she put the cigarette out when told to , said : ‘ They made me feel like a criminal .
15 SHE MADE ME FEEL LIKE A MUSICAL INSTRUMENT .
16 I asked if they would please call me Richard — Dick , I said , made me feel like a symbol of some kind .
17 After a disastrous relationship in my early twenties in which the woman made me feel like a rapist , I gave up on the idea of sex and women .
18 They made me feel like a dirty slag and serve me right for getting pregnant .
19 What she said and how she said it made me feel like a child .
20 Although the neighbours made me feel like an evil , uncaring daughter , I knew in my heart that you 'd understand because you always did — I loved you and that was all you needed to know .
21 It made me feel like an old sock !
22 Paul Oldfield topped the lot in Melody Maker when he wrote of the track ‘ Living And Learning ’ that it ‘ made me think of a man who favoured The Jasmine Minks and My Bloody Valentine , but whose bedroom was so damp that miraculous spores and mildew afflicted his brown suede and paisley . ’
23 It made me think of a Bedouin taking out his prayer carpet and unrolling it in the vastness of the desert .
24 It had two wings , one of which made me think of a church .
25 She always wore a flowered cotton overall and her thin gingery hair framed a face that made me think of a martyr in search of grace .
26 E actually yours made me think of a story that I was told many years ago on a coach trip over Dartmoor
27 When it was over , she walked across to the television , switched it off , turned to look at Charlotte and said : ‘ They made me sound like an unfeeling bitch . ’
28 Sometimes they cluster on a page like blackberries on a fecund bush , and made me wonder with a stab of unease whether my own writings on American politics and presidents have not managed equally often narrowly to miss the usage and the nomenclature .
29 The intern cleaned me up then made me lie on a trolley in a curtained cubicle .
30 Tommaso made me look like a mature man , an important man .
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