Example sentences of "[was/were] [pron] [noun] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 and also you know when Janet 's doing a stint because you can see if Barbara 's smokes well me and Jenny had a do that week and then you , it were my birthday on the Wednesday were n't it ?
2 Independent Television undermined the BBC 's historical sense of privilege and security : with less than 30% of the national audience — it went down to 27% in the 1950s — the BBC 's position as the main instrument of broadcasting was clearly threatened , as were its claims to the full licence fee .
3 In their evidence to the Social Services Committee on the Griffiths Report , Evans and Maxwell concluded that its most far-reaching and radical aspects were its proposals for the central management of the service , with its promise of a new relationship between the DHSS and local health authorities and the change from passive to active management ( Evans and Maxwell 1984 ) .
4 Soccer fans were its contribution to the global tradition of random violence .
5 In Britain , for the Irish entering in search of a new life , Liverpool and London stations were their gateways to the streets more often paved with misery than with gold .
6 Before the review began , and immediately after the agreed report had been presented , I interviewed the various participants in order to find out what were their feelings about the review .
7 The government subsidy made it likely that the staff of the two papers were less worried about pushing up sales than were their counterparts on the then Lonrho-owned Standard .
8 The Salesian Sisters , who were their hostesses for the weekend , gave them a warm and friendly welcome , and the retreatants quickly settled down in the beautiful house .
9 ‘ But all right , ’ he said sociably , ‘ were there days at the orphanage that were better than others ? ’
10 In this sense ancient people were artists as they lived their whole lives in harmony with the Earth , but were they artists in the more conventional sense ?
11 What is much more difficult to know is what were his motives for the decision , and what he expected to be the likely outcome .
12 Important as were his contacts with the Frankish rulers for his preaching in Hesse and Thuringia , he could scarcely bring himself to share the company of the fast-living Frankish bishops whom he met at court — Milo of Trier ‘ and others like him ’ , as he said dismissively — until his mentor , Bishop Daniel of Winchester , had to cite to him texts from Augustine and the Bible against separating oneself from sinners and in favour of dissimulation .
13 The only sounds were his footsteps on the stairs , the slamming of her front door followed by the noise of his car engine as it roared away from her flat .
14 Less happy were his efforts during the late 1890s to revive the Speaker as an organ for radical ideas , and his editorship of the ailing Daily News from 1901 to 1902 .
15 Green realized he was better with the pencil than writing but made his excuse ‘ were his information for the satisfaction of an individual only , he would prefer the former as a vehicle for information , but to give to the public a numerous series of explanations all cloathed in bodily forms ; besides time and other minor considerations , it is necessary to consult the copper smith , the printer , and the paper merchant . ’
16 Among many professional distinctions were his presidencies of the Institutions of Mechanical Engineers ( 1909 ) and Civil Engineers ( 1919 ) , and the ( Smeatonian ) Society of Civil Engineers ( 1931 ) .
17 Other servants of the prince who continued to hold office in the earldom were his steward of the household , Sir William Stanley , and Robert Roo , his gentleman of the pantry .
18 Other servants of the prince who continued to hold office in the earldom were his steward of the household , Sir William Stanley , and Robert Roo , his gentleman of the pantry .
19 ‘ I have seen God face to face , and yet my life is preserved ’ were his words at the start of the day .
20 Both were his colleagues amongst the seven original confederate magnates .
21 Such events , however , were not very frequent — a whole year might pass without one — and so the only additional earnings he could usually rely on were his winnings at the weekly bridge school .
22 As though he had suddenly realised that Curtis was bluffing him , frightening him into pleading for mercy in a pathetic attempt to humiliate him — or perhaps to force from him a confession of what the lieutenant claimed were his crimes against the whores he had exterminated .
23 The Carpenter family were themselves stalwarts of the said chapel , and Charles 's bride is probably the Elizabeth Carpenter who was baptised there on 2 April 1760 , then aged between 11 and 12 years old .
24 What what were your experiences of the war ?
25 ‘ So they were your soldiers at the ford , ’ Isabel realised .
26 1 Why did all the children laugh at Julie on the first day she went to her new school ? 2 How do you think Julie felt that day ? 3 Did you feel sorry for her then ? 4 Did you feel sorry for her later in the story ? 5 When Julie was left tied to the lamp post was it fair , unfair , cruel … or what ? 6 Whose fault was it that Julie and Bee stopped seeing each other ? 7 Why did Julie get hurts and what effect did it have on Bee ? 8 What were your feelings at the end ?
27 And how much , how much were your subs for the Labour Party , how much was your membership ?
28 So when you had peat on , were your doors in the water then ?
29 The functionalist public lawyers of the interwar years were our equivalent of the American legal realists .
30 Noting that " Europe has entered a new , promising era " , the declaration stated that " as a consequence this Alliance must and will adapt " and must " reach out to the countries of the East which were our adversaries in the Cold War and extend to them the hand of friendship " .
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