Example sentences of "was [verb] [pron] [prep] an " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Perhaps he was using it as an office , ’ the agent suggested , kindly . |
2 | There was no sense in expecting any help from the boy , the only thing to be done was to exclude him as an irresponsible minor from the consideration of his own fate . |
3 | It occurred to Cassie that he was keeping himself under an unnatural control , like a muzzled animal . |
4 | This man was lodging himself like an irritating burr under her skin . |
5 | She probably imagined she was comporting herself in an attractively provocative and feminine fashion , thought Lydia , sneering and lengthening her stride . |
6 | If I was interviewing you as an , as a member of the institution as a , a local spokesman |
7 | Such inspiration on the captain 's part was to help him towards an OBE , for with England then beating Australia in the first two games of the final , their clean sweep of three trophies out of three was accomplished . |
8 | It had been owned by the Turner family , and my aunt 's builder husband had bought it from them and was turning it into an apartment house when he was called up for service with the Army . |
9 | Instead I was getting myself into an increasingly confrontational situation , a battle of wills , with the Director of Coaching . |
10 | As the abrasive words poured into her ears , he was moving her against an ornamental lacquerwork cabinet of hip height and bending her backwards , a hand dealing with the intricacies of her bustier with a sure skill that bore witness to a wealth of experience with even the most esoteric of feminine garments . |
11 | He was threatening them with an extraordinary general meeting of the club . |
12 | While householders fumed in queues to find out how they should pay , he was sunning himself on an Indian Ocean holiday . |
13 | That way , he would be left alone without worrying why no one was asking him for an autograph . |
14 | ‘ I 'd hoped for so much from that class since I was taking it at an American university , but — ’ |
15 | Patrick did n't need to be a doctor to know that his mother was drinking herself into an early grave . |
16 | He was regarding me with an indulgence that did not convince me . |
17 | He knew well enough that convincing politicians was a tough job , so his plan was to present them with an informed and insistent electorate of the future . |
18 | He saw the work that I examined and dealt with , and on the Tuesday , I was saluting him as an inspector . |
19 | She had stayed there , always conscious that she was preparing herself for an existence of unutterable boredom , and was one of an enormous number of women who were training themselves for an ‘ if I do n't marry ’ life . |
20 | He was playing her like an angler with a fish and knew that she would soon be netted . |
21 | The music by which he frequently composed his poetry ( a natural continuance of a centuries-old tradition ) was asserting itself as an independent expression . |
22 | The Feldwebel had not moved and I looked all the way up his black leather jack-boots and the thin grey greatcoat with its cheap tin buttons looking as if they had come out of a Christmas pudding before I noticed that his eyes were slightly open and that he was watching me with an uncle 's amusement . |
23 | That curious flicker was in his eyes again ; he was watching her with an intensity that was unnerving . |
24 | The theatre of war slowly became enlarged , a fact which , paradoxically , was to prove something of an advantage to the kings of France as they tried , if not always with success , to unite their entire population in a common war effort against the English . |
25 | The unattainable ideal woman was to become something of an obsession for Rider Haggard , idealised but hardly ideal , for the strange being he introduced in She was both good and evil , goddess and witch . |