Example sentences of "it [coord] [vb past] [verb] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | They were also content to leave the whole affair as far as they knew it , understood it or had allocated the blame for it . |
2 | When it was the right shape she blew on it , then closed her fist around it and began to massage the bull 's neck and shoulders and back and rump , tapping it hard and rhythmically with the knuckles of the clenched fist . |
3 | Anthony returned soon after five o'clock with the news that there was no penicillin in the city at all , but that he had telephoned everyone he could think of who might supply it and had sent a telegram to UNRRA headquarters . |
4 | ‘ We managed to sell it as a going concern , but got next to nothing for it and had to take a massive write-off . |
5 | Ron said that he 'd been preparing an obituary of Lord Mountbatten for some time , that Mountbatten had somehow got wind of it and had approached the BBC with a view to taking part . |
6 | I had managed it and had had a golden Stuttgart . |
7 | She liked the RAF , but had chosen the wrong bit of it and left to become an animal nurse . |
8 | WHEN CHARLES WEBB 'S novel The Graduate was first published in 1963 , Lawrence Turman , a 37-year-old independent producer with a couple of films to his name — The Young Doctors and I Could Go On Singing — read it , liked it and managed to acquire the rights in 1964 for $20,000 from the ingenuous author . |
9 | The Government stopped it and pledged to save the mountain . |
10 | Miss Crawford would probably stand a much better chance of becoming an actress if she stopped talking about it and started to do the necessary work to bring about her ambition . |
11 | They looked intently at him , then at each other , then executed a smart about-face ; the scullion with the loaf threw it at the other , who caught it and started to hit the other minion over the head with it as they ran back into the mist the way they had come , their figures — one crouched almost double , one striking out with the loaf of bread — and their running footsteps quickly absorbed by the rolling mists . |
12 | He had seen Cocteau 's film on the subject several times , was full of admiration for it and wanted to achieve a similar of Cocteau . |
13 | ‘ He was pushing a pram with nothing in it and wanted to cross the road , ’ he recalled . |