Example sentences of "he was [adv] [verb] to " in BNC.

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1 I hardly remember him and what I tell you about him was mostly told to me by my mother .
2 She met his determined gaze and knew that avoiding him was n't going to be easy .
3 Under the tutelage of John Ruskin [ q.v. ] he joined the ‘ Hinksey roadmenders ’ , and through him was later introduced to Octavia Hill [ q.v . ] .
4 Although Mondello was convicted of lesser charges , including riot , his acquittal on the murder counts was unanticipated because the evidence against him was generally considered to be stronger than that which had led to Fama 's conviction .
5 It was a time when he was immensely drawn to panache , and he felt done with the prim and the hangdog for good .
6 He was conspicuously trying to be brave , but it was quite clear he had been devastated by the experience .
7 This was what he 'd wanted of her all the time ; now , he was finally getting to it , baiting the trap not with jewels or furs but with what he assumed would matter to her .
8 He was finally apprenticed to a cordwainer or master shoe-maker .
9 He was both listening to suggestions and putting forward names that other people had suggested .
10 Now he was scarcely talking to her , but more to himself , analysing and defining as always .
11 He was coldly determined to be a good lover .
12 He was particularly linked to the problems of football hooliganism and sparked a storm when he called English supporters deported from the Italian 1990 World Cup ‘ the effluent tendency ’ .
13 What had this Richard Blake said , well , she got the impression that he was counting on coming to a series of Transatlantic insurance conferences in the spring , and he was either coming to Montreal first , or to New York , she could n't remember which order it was , search me , said Louise , she had n't thought it mattered all that much .
14 If he was not a god himself , he was intimately linked to God , a manifestation of God 's favour and God 's will .
15 All went well , and he was duly admitted to St Paul 's College in Cheltenham from the Islington Trinity National School , having been awarded a Queen 's Scholarship , second class .
16 He was probably connected to the London commercial and financial dynasty , perhaps through Sir Richard Gresham [ q.v. ] , who had acquired extensive monastic properties in Yorkshire at the dissolution .
17 He was probably apprenticed to the east coast coal trade .
18 Although discussions took place about a possible return to the former scale of activity , Newlove 's health did not improve and he was physically limited to Wells where either One-Year or Terminal courses continued until 1934 when the WEA branch became inactive .
19 He was accordingly sent to a family that had no sons .
20 He was powerfully addicted to conspiracy theory , according to which the group was continually under surveillance by the Special Branch and MI5 , while concentration camps were being prepared to incarcerate the militants as the capitalist crisis deepend .
21 During the early and middle sixties he was firmly attached to such composers as Bach , Haydn and , especially , Schumann .
22 He worked for several years at the British Rail Works in Swindon , where he was regularly exposed to asbestos .
23 He was regularly attending to the pumps on Sundays for which he was paid 1/ the " stem " , or day , and he assisted in the workings by wheelbarrowing and other miscellaneous jobs .
24 He was universally considered to be no good , lazy and a bad manager .
25 Although he was affectionately known to all as ‘ Broomstick ’ , this fetching nickname severely underestimated the enormity of his appendage .
26 A competent scholar who had an inbred regard for the pastoral needs of country congregations , he was exactly suited to his place , upon which he never needed to insist , and its responsibilities , which he more than adequately fulfilled .
27 Both leaders were each sentenced to 18 months ' imprisonment and three years ' civil rights deprivation ( although an appeal court ordered Sadiq 's release immediately before the April election and he was again elected to Parliament — see p. 37388 ) .
28 He was excellently placed to be the next Poet Laureate when the position fell vacant in ninety-six .
29 He was already determined to be a poet — between 1787 and 1789 he had composed An Evening Walk — and part of the aim of his 1790 long vacation walking-tour was to gather the material which was to form the basis of Descriptive Sketches .
30 But instead of working on Varsity , the established undergraduate paper , he was already determined to be different .
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