Example sentences of "[pron] stood on [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I could hear the sound of rent cloth in my head , but I stood on a wooden chair while Lili pinned the seams closer , standing quietly like a broken horse to be saddled and bridled .
2 I stood on the round wall and wound the handle as fast as I could , but when the bucket was still just out of reach , the rope kept slipping so I could not reach the bucket .
3 I stood on the final tee with Ken Schofield and imagined the kind of pressure build-up the players were feeling .
4 As I stood on the tufted grass , surrounded by natural beauty , I felt as if I 'd come to another world
5 It was once full of treasures , but all I could think about as I stood on the battlemented roof , looking out over the Aegean , was that a disciple of Christ 's had sat in his cell in a little monastery half-way up the hill recording the extraordinary revelations he had been vouchsafed .
6 of Holborough , this was a corrugated iron building lined with timber , which stood on the opposite side of the road and lower down , where now the houses of Browndens Road , begin .
7 As she stood on the crimson carpet , hesitating , the chandeliers suddenly flashed on , dispelling the gloom .
8 From where she stood on the gravelled forecourt , she saw that the flight of steps ahead led up to the living accommodation at the higher level , no doubt to exploit the panoramic view , while below , built into the slope , were the garages and stores .
9 The announcement concludes a 33-year worldwide hunt for Mengele , who stood on the unloading ramp at Auschwitz sending Jews left to the gas chambers or right to the camp with a flick of his thumb .
10 We stood on the concrete set of the main concourse while extras thronged about .
11 We wandered over Clare Bridge , which always looks as if it is about to collapse , and then up to St John 's , where we stood on the old Wren bridge and talked for some time , gazing at the so-called Bridge of Sighs which connects the old and new parts of St John 's .
12 There we stood on the perilous slope .
13 We stood on the high shingle bank , striving to keep our balance .
14 We stood on the top step , an icy wind driving any sleep from our eyes and faces , staring out over the snow-carpeted grounds .
15 After an hour on the flat we stood on an old snow patch at the foot of the Plaret cascades and looked straight up a perfect glacier valley to the hut , and beyond the Promontoire hut , glinting in the afternoon light , high on a southerly arm of La Meije .
16 There the rise and swell of incomprehensible Latin seemed to have a grandeur that aroused the spirit of poetry in the Gaels , as if they stood on a rocky shore communing with the waves .
17 The other two men were hit by the two gunmen as they stood on a nearby footpath at the spot where black taxis operate up and down Belfast 's Falls Road .
18 They stood on the landward edge of the riverside path , very close to the lipping water .
19 Five minutes later they stood on the grassy bank looking down at the brown water .
20 They stood on the warm asphalt .
21 As instructed , the building was largely three-storey , but it stood on a high basement and was dominated by a spiky ventilation tower centrally placed over the War Department .
22 It stood on a mossy hill , and was environed by an expanse of peat soil and many stacks of the dark-coloured fuel ; and in reaching it , many most forbidding sloughs had to be rounded and jumped over .
23 Poacher Marino Malerba , 35 , shot a stag dead as it stood on an overhanging rock in Trento , Italy .
24 He called his future domicile Belmont , for it stood on the high ground , with a view sweeping down through the coconut palms to the shore where he had first landed that night he took possession .
25 For a few months he stood on a European par with Adler and Liebknecht and tried to take responsibility for Russians interned after the Brest–Litovsk peace .
26 The man refused to come clear ; he stood on the far side of the horse , soothing the animal and examining the fresh wound on its neck .
27 He stood on the bottom step long after the heavy metal grids had been pulled across the foyer and the last of the cinema lights turned off .
28 No , the sea , said Wilkie , and she looked out , at the Stella Maris , anchored off the coast , and there he stood on the curving prow , pale on the pale sky , with a triangular patch of yellow like a painted sun — Van Gogh chrome , not Renaissance gilt — between his thighs and his limbs creamy-brown like the foam on the new cappuccino coffee .
29 His heart thumped as he stood on the Yugoslav border and stared through the night at the nearby fields in Hungary .
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