Example sentences of "had [verb] on [art] [noun pl] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 There were also reports that some had jumped on the trains as they passed through East Germany , or that the numbers could have included previously uncounted children .
2 You know that that 's about all the room there was was honestly was a table and chairs and more often than not a couple of us had to sit on the stairs .
3 Many spectators had squatted on the dunes surrounding the 6th , most of them on the Maiden itself .
4 Historically , the Senate 's claim to a say in the making of foreign policy had depended on the provisions in the Constitution regarding treaty-making .
5 He had depended on the Britons for support , and may have felt obliged to provide defences : so I argued .
6 Don Roberto had worked with the Colonel and had acted as cut-out between him and the CIA on the operations which Trent had undertaken on the Americans ' behalf .
7 Complete silence had fallen on the children .
8 That 's another story , where they were , and if you 're interested , downstairs there 's a very good map that shows you superimposed on a modern map of Oxford where they were , but they very much affected citizens in the St Aldate 's , because every citizen , and every scholar who was still in the university , between the ages of 16 and 60 had to work on the fortifications at least one day a week , or pay a shilling fine .
9 AS A COPYWRITER AT the agency responsible for advertising the launch of Femidom I felt I had to comment on the remarks made by your testees ( pun intended ) .
10 ‘ Gravity knew how much harder it had to pull on the keys — to make them hit the ground at the same time as the paper .
11 Two days earlier the human rights organization Amnesty International had reported on the conditions under which the detainees were held , and on allegations of torture .
12 He explained that he wanted to stay silent until the special trade union review group had reported on the options available .
13 ‘ I read in the paper the other day that two people had met on the steps of St Paul 's Cathedral after fifty years or something .
14 He did not recognize me but I knew he was the gentleman I had met on the stairs when visiting Miss Havisham .
15 Previous attempts to establish a common tariff had foundered on the objections of the smaller CARICOM members , who feared that it would have a negative impact upon their economies .
16 Attempts to harness the numerical strength of the casual poor had foundered on the rocks of seeming apathy .
17 There lingered perhaps an echo of grimness , and an echo of something else : an expression she had seen on the faces of men who have just loaded ship for a voyage .
18 Supposing I had said on the stairs , do what you like with me , but do n't send me away ?
19 And when she had risen on the wings of ecstasy , then , the tip of his prying tongue alighted upon her dinky bottom-hole .
20 Rose knew that she had built on the foundations well and truly laid by Grandpa .
21 In acknowledgement of the urgent need for reform in this area , de Klerk proposed initially that henceforth : ( i ) the death penalty would be limited as an option of sentence to extreme cases , and the area of judicial discretion in the imposition of sentence would be broadened ( currently the death sentence was mandatory for certain crimes ) ; ( ii ) all those sentenced to death would be granted automatic right of appeal — up till now there had been no appeal against this sentence ; ( iii ) no further executions would be carried out until Parliament had decided on the proposals .
22 Several hundred thousand Spaniards and non-Spaniards had died on the battlefields of Spain between 1936 and 1939 ; at least 200,000 more were to be executed during the next few years , 2,000,000 would suffer imprisonment or forced labour , and millions more again faced a lifetime of discrimination for having fought on behalf of the Republic .
23 Thousands had died on the battlefields , in rearguard bombing raids and in repressive purges .
24 It had shone on the thugs who had turned and run .
25 As late as the 1760s an influential theorist could still argue that an ambassador who , on his own initiative , encouraged sedition within the state to which he was accredited , could be punished by it even with death , while if he had acted on the orders of his master he could be held as a hostage until the latter had given satisfaction .
26 ‘ They had clashed on the stairs and argued over a girl , ’ said Mr Crigman .
27 The man holding the torch was , he saw now , one of the local constables he had used on the arms search .
28 The mere fact , for example , that the investor had sold on the shares would not by itself render the statutory remedy of rescission inapplicable .
29 Hugo had been perfectly happy to talk at length on the Margie Llewellyn Show about the days when he had played on the streets of the Bronx , and how in this unlikely setting a talent for sketching had developed into an interest in designing clothes .
30 The first great white flakes had melted on the pavements , now it was falling thicker and faster , building up on the window ledges and in the cricks and crannies , turning to slush on the roads as the traffic churned through it .
  Next page