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

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1 Nicandra led them by all the ways she had known and disregarded since childhood .
2 There was a very long and comfortable settee in front of the window which had a view of the River Thames which mesmerized me to such an extent that I could scarcely tear myself away to go to bed .
3 When Captain Cook encountered them in 1778 the Eskimos of Bering Strait were using iron knives and wearing glass beads .
4 Found her on half an acre in Buckinghamshire with her mother and got her for my youngest lad .
5 Alice quickly took the key and tried it in all the doors , but oh dear !
6 A waitress told me of such an incident when she heard a rumour that her hotel management had appointed private detectives with the power to search staff homes — a not uncommon fear among hotel workers and one paralleling similar periodic fears in other occupations of this type .
7 And yet … the thought crept back just before she drifted off to sleep … it had been rather nice that he had actually noticed her in the past , and noticed her to such an extent that he was now in a position to compare the woman she 'd become to the girl she 'd once been .
8 " Moustachio , " the US intelligence agent who had already visited him in February , returned.He met the Shah in the palace in Rabat and told him of all the dangers that the US systems would pose for him-lawsuits to find his money , congressional subpoenas and demonstrations .
9 What was it about him that constantly stirred her into such a state of agitation ?
10 It was in light of this experience of priests who were barely capable of understanding the Latin Vulgate and Mass , or who juggled with a text and expounded it in such a way as to obscure its original meaning , that Tyndale now decided to translate the New Testament into English ‘ because I had perceived by experience , how that it was impossible to establish the lay-people in any truth , except the Scripture were plainly laid before their eyes in their mother-tongue ’ .
11 Yar , I think I got a copy but I just sort of filed it with all the Quality Manual stuff , as there were various different things which needed .
12 I just took my napkin , filled it with all the coins I had won and tied the corners into a knot .
13 Sir Austin Pearce , one of the NRM 's guardians , told us via muffled a Tannoy ( uncannily similar to a real station announcement ) that the NRM would not merely look to the past , but also to the present and the future of rail .
14 ‘ There was one teacher , Mr Richardson , and he encouraged me in all the sports I did , really .
15 His two teenage sons were fanatically keen on farming and he encouraged them in all the agricultural skills ; but he fed the calves himself .
16 I sobbed with fright , even as I addressed the one and only question which confronted me in such a dangerous situation .
17 Meanwhile as my visits to South Africa showed me in such a traumatic and depressing way the conditions of the majority have got worse there 's economic recession lay-offs , high inflation rate and growing violence more people have been killed in South Africa in the last two years than in any previous two years that you look at .
18 This picture , the third in Faye 's series , focused more fully on her face and the likeness of features and form was very good , but it showed her with such a yearning , wistful expression that everyone who saw it and knew her would think her life had been one long secret sorrow .
19 Jason and Rachel Sheffield rush between us , helping with the boat , and there is Jean who has been our main support and encouraged and organized us through all the long months of preparation , fed us , nagged us and even done my washing !
20 But Charlton joint manager Alan Curbishley said : ‘ They slaughtered us for half an hour — but only half an hour .
21 I challenged him with all the dishonesty he had shown and all the damage he was doing to the paper .
22 As he approached his defeated enemy , he felt no sense of triumph , which surprised him after all the frustrating years of hunting him down .
23 Daly started his first round at 1pm , and finished it at 7.30 the previous evening .
24 He thus pioneered in this country the discursive , witty , exuberant , and surrealist style of humour he bequeathed to his close friend J. B. Morton [ q.v. ] , who took the column over in 1924 and developed it through half a century into an art form .
25 The same lover had made palm trees out of Edwardian ostrich feathers and tied them to all the newel posts of the four-storey staircase .
26 Rhythm , the primary revelation of Indian music for Glass , preoccupied him to such an extent that one of his pieces at this time , Play , consisted of two lines for soprano saxophones. each instrument using only two notes .
27 She rewarded him with such a beaming smile that he took the memory of it into the surgery with him , where it stayed all morning , brightening the day for him .
28 He began to kiss her fingers , one by one , and Meredith gazed helplessly at him , knowing she loved him with such a sudden , painful realisation that she groaned aloud .
29 Furthermore he interpreted it in such a way that ‘ support ’ was not an empty word .
30 ‘ He treated me in such a way that …
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