Example sentences of "he [was/were] [v-ing] [art] " in BNC.

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1 'E was phonin' the police , that 's what 'e was doin' .
2 A police officer with a sheaf of papers before him was using the desk telephone presumably still checking alibis .
3 But what really did for him was losing a lot of money at Keyser Ullmann in the property crash of 1973 .
4 He had a curious , heavy growth of fur on the crown of his head , which gave him an odd appearance , as though he were wearing a kind of cap .
5 When he spoke it was as if he were dictating a letter to her , concentrating on the correctness of his grammar and syntax .
6 She wanted him to feel as if he were kissing a lifeless rag doll .
7 Tenderly he touched her , kissed her lips , not with passion now , but with a delicate reverence , as if he were kissing the fragile bloom of a rare flower .
8 He ran his eyes down the column of figures as if he were taking a good look at Voluptua Whoopee in a no-piece swimsuit and whistled ‘ Dixie . ’
9 At Oxford he had gained a First in Greats , for which , according to a contemporary , he had worked as if he were taking a chartered accountancy exam .
10 He now sounded as though he were beginning a lecture and I thought he must have learned that intonation from his tutors .
11 No other book so well demonstrates the influence of the cinema on Minton 's art : he conceived each design as if he were composing a frame , making frequent use of close-up and distortion .
12 His movements were slow , his gaze abstracted , as if he were composing a poem in his head .
13 The boy crooked one arm and stuck out the other as if he were holding a gun .
14 ‘ Ye-es , ’ said Linley as though he were considering the predicament with sympathy .
15 In the course of filling his lungs he felt as if he were rising a few inches off the ground .
16 He had the disconcerting habit of using my name as if he were addressing a butler or a chauffeur .
17 Naturally Terry had hard-line views on all this , and as we changed for the show on that charged night he proclaimed them to the entire cast , as if he were addressing a meeting .
18 Dad started off in statesman-like fashion , as if he were addressing the United Nations , earnestly saying he 'd come to love Eva over the time he 'd known her and so on .
19 Pascoe felt as though he were seeing a moment from his future but could n't guess what he would feel when the moment arrived .
20 He felt he knew very little about her present feelings , which were so malign toward him and unmapped that it was as if he were seeing the back side of the moon .
21 He spoke with a total lack of melodrama , as though he were reciting a shopping list .
22 He worked as if he were roping a piece of luggage , barely looking at Tessa , not touching her unless he had to .
23 These were his friends but he felt unnatural in their company , as if he were acting a part .
24 He leant towards the young man now and , his voice dropping as if he were imparting a secret , he said , ‘ Do you know that they are one of the best brands sold by Harrods of London ? ’
25 ‘ Sit down , Mr O'Malley , ’ he said in a slow ponderous voice , as though he were inviting a weary traveller to take his ease .
26 The sun , the clear sky , the bright colours , the prosperous look of this lively , airy university town and wine-growing capital ; the stalls massed with flowers ; fresh fish shining pink and gold and silver in shallow baskets ; cherries and apricots and peaches on the fruit barrows ; one stall piled with about a ton of little bunches of soup or pot-au-feu vegetables — a couple of slim leeks , a carrot or two , a long thin turnip , celery leaves , and parsley , all cleaned and neatly bound with a rush , ready for the pot ; another charcuterie stall , in the covered part of the market , displaying yards of fresh sausage festooned around a pyramid-shaped wire stand ; a fishwife crying pussy 's parcels of fish wrapped tidily in newspaper ; an old woman at the market entrance selling winkles from a little cart shaped like a pram ; a fastidiously dressed old gentleman choosing tomatoes and leaf artichokes , one by one , as if he were picking a bouquet of flowers , and taking them to the scales to be weighed ( how extraordinary that we in England put up so docilely with not being permitted by greengrocers or even barrow boys to touch or smell the produce we are buying ) ; a lorry with an old upright piano in the back threading round and round the market place trying to get out .
27 as if he were telling the story to someone else , Culley gave him a full account of what he 'd heard on the tape .
28 When they 'd moved in he 'd made a point of telling just about everybody where it was and how much it was costing — wincing a little at the same time , as if he were telling the story against himself and his own folly — but it had become a sterile kind of heaven , and he sat around in it like some forgotten angel .
29 The surgeon had sounded a note of amused condescension as though he were betraying a colleague 's unfortunate weakness , wryly observed , which a more prudent man would have detected before beginning his medical training , or at least would have come to terms with before his second year .
30 Fagg emitted an interesting glugging sound , rather as if he were repeating the name of the insulted Vietnamese over and over again .
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