Example sentences of "he was [adv] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 " Count Munichhausen " who " supplied " him was probably the Premierminister des Kurfurstentums Hannover , Adolph Freiherr von Munchhausen ( 1698–1770 ) ( not the " Lugendbaron " Hieronymus Freiherr von Munchhausen notorious for the mendacity of his tales of his military exploits ! ) .
2 The twitch broadened fractionally into what might have been a smile on anyone else but on him was just a rearrangement of composed features .
3 Maybe he should go back , but inside him was still the lump of anger against them .
4 Her feeling for him was now the breath and life of Tess 's being .
5 The secular cleric had the further advantage from the king 's standpoint that he was strictly a life-tenant , unable to transmit his abbacy to a legitimate heir .
6 If Shakespeare showed little inclination to control the condition of his plays ' textual printing , he was both a part owner of the company which produced them and was himself a director of that company .
7 He was both a symptom of , and a resource for , the revival of Classical Art in the 18th century .
8 Sheepshanks , a leading figure in the Royal Astronomical Society , himself fitted into all three of his categories : he was both a lawyer and a clergyman , and did not practise either profession because he had inherited wealth from his cloth-manufacturing father .
9 He was both a stand-in skipper and an emergency defender during Liverpool 's successful European trip to Cyprus this week .
10 He was both the child of the National Education system and its architect .
11 He was unexpectedly a man of great gaiety and to see him at a dance was an absolute delight .
12 Horses were his speciality , and although he was rather a stout and shortish man-he sported a moustache - he was quite strong .
13 But he was away a lot , and then it would be up to Janice .
14 So he was either a man of great courage , or a great masochist .
15 " Able-Oboe-Charlie " was the aircrew phonetics used by the early Pathfinders to identify their Commandant , although at the time he was officially a Commander of the Pathfinder Force , with the acting rank of group captain under the control of No 3 Group for day-to-day administration .
16 He looked like a half-starved bum yet he was evidently a man who had known better times .
17 But he was evidently a man of powerful passions , and in the middle of his reading he broke out into an angry protest at the Council 's acquiescence in secular tyrannies in general , and at the lack of action in the case of Anselm in particular .
18 He was evidently a magister by 1273 ( of Oxford University , according to the fifteenth-century antiquarian William Worcester , q.v. ) , when he was presented to the rectory of Steppingley ( Bedfordshire ) by Dunstable Priory .
19 In 1925 , considering a book by Cecil Sharp on the history of dancing , Eliot made the criticism that though Sharp was a historian , he was neither a philosopher nor an anthropologist , and so his brief notes were not just insufficient , but actually conducive to error .
20 He was neither a plotter nor a courtier .
21 The Gauntletts left a house , the Groves a school and , attacked by a critic for writing patriotic verse when he was neither a soldier nor sailor himself , Sir Henry Newbolt left these lines :
22 He was neither a hypocrite nor a puritan .
23 They all assured her that he was probably a multi-millionaire .
24 When I was a bit older , I thought he was probably a thief and that the bag he carried was for the loot . ’
25 He was probably a Greek from southern Italy .
26 He was probably a stranger — just a visitor , ’ she said , ‘ who might easily have rushed away .
27 Here , he was probably a nation of one .
28 She 'd assumed that he was probably a touch simple .
29 He was probably an actor she had hired to impersonate one .
30 ‘ You may recall my telling you that he was probably an agent for the High Police .
  Next page