Example sentences of "[vb past] in [pron] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | The recent publication of all known speeches and writings of Hitler between 1919 and 1924 provides for the first time an opportunity to observe the self-image profiled in his public statements . |
2 | They will all be wined and dined in our private box . |
3 | Similarly some measure of Pakistan 's eventual triumph was due to Imran Khan 's unconventional tactics and the confidence which he demonstrated in his leg-spinner Mushtaq Ahmed by slotting him into his team 's battle plan at an early stage of proceedings . |
4 | As we demonstrated in our previous book , moreover , the wedding at Cana — which may in fact have been Jesus 's own wedding — was not a modest village affair , but a sumptuous ceremony of the gentry or aristocracy . |
5 | Her small white teeth drew in her upper lip as his hand stroked so erotically , his thumb tracing circles of white heat . |
6 | As dusk drew in its final flecks of gold |
7 | The floor was crowded with cardboard boxes that were filled with leaflets for the Literacy Project that Ellen helped in her spare time . |
8 | In 1914 , Mr J. F. Gairns of the Railway Magazine visited the Works which he described in its final form . |
9 | This had then led to the classical dogmas of the Trinity and the incarnation , which Harnack described in his great History of Dogma as ‘ the fruit of the Greek spirit on the ground of the gospel ’ , the product of the ‘ hellenisation of Christianity ’ . |
10 | It comes close to what Arthur Haley described in his novel Roots . |
11 | I am reminded of the lesson I took in a school in Sylhet which I described in my first article and the way the understanding of the task helped the children to understand the English I was using . |
12 | He still encountered in his daily life a few who looked past the empty gaud that distracted lesser minds and longed for a revelation that would burn the tinsel away , an Apocalypse that would show the Fifth the glories it yearned for in its sleep . |
13 | Mill , unlike Paine , felt obliged , however , to meet the common bourgeois objection against universal male suffrage that the mass of the people were not fit to govern , and would use political power to " plunder the rich " , as Macaulay charged in his formidable attack on Mill 's Essay . |
14 | She was taking a risk , for Constance sometimes rejoiced in her gipsy blood and sometimes deplored it . |
15 | A one-time Economic Adviser to HM Treasury turned university Professor of Personal Finance , K. Alec Chrystal , gave no discernible answer to the question he posed in his Social Affairs Unit report Consumer Debt : Whose Responsibility ? |
16 | The words ‘ Rarefied atmosphere , yes ? ’ spoken in her own voice , returned to bother her . |
17 | Into this somewhat bizarre plot , Hopper built in his odd interjections designed to remind the cinema audience that it was only a movie they were watching , that nothing was real . |
18 | Like a cat , Constance luxuriated in its sensual heat . |
19 | The following extract is taken from this last chapter , and elaborates on some of the problems we mentioned in our first chapter , ( pp 7–8 ) . |
20 | As I mentioned in my recent phone call the best site for it is the Mill Yard , as last year . |
21 | ‘ As I mentioned in my annual report statement , 1992 was a watershed year . |
22 | I mentioned in my last letter to Fiona that Lord Lovat had been badly wounded during an attack on the enemy positions on the evening of 12th June . |
23 | Surely there were many which went at a slow tempo , such as the first Beethoven Modlinger Dance I mentioned in my original article , the rapid-fire tattoos of its French horns ensuring a slow pace . |
24 | I mentioned in my original article that at its upper end the Minuet spills over into the very fast dance the Viennese called a ‘ Deutsche ’ or ‘ Teutch ’ ( Mozart : ‘ Teitsch ’ ) . |
25 | Gabriel stopped in his sodden tracks , overwhelmed with guilt . |
26 | Leicester seemed out of it but remarkably seconds before the break Lee Philpott crossed from the left and found stand-in striker Steve Walsh who headed in his 7th goal in as many games since moving up front . |
27 | I promised in my five minute address last year that I would be a listener and I 've already listened to many of your views over the last twelve months and indeed today . |
28 | ‘ Have we leave to write down what you are all agreed upon ? ’ he shouted in his loudest voice . |
29 | Sharpe shouted in his best Sergeant 's voice , and the sight and sound of his anger was enough to make the elegant couples shrink away from him . |
30 | Each knelt in her partitioned alcove , commending heart and soul to God and praying that Satan , who wandered around like a lion seeking his prey , did not harm their bodies or souls that night . |