Example sentences of "he took a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 He took a casual step towards her , and extended a mock-polite hand .
2 He took a tentative step towards Helen , stretched out his hand .
3 He took a tentative bite and then started howling again , so I had to open a tin of Whiskas — turkey flavour , full price .
4 Yet , poorer as it made him , he took a certain pride in keeping his wife .
5 He took a certain route leading to another kind of life and ended up famous .
6 Now , as he was waiting , he took a dispirited look around .
7 He took a straight line towards the gates and found the gun at once .
8 Releasing her shoulders , he took a firm grip on her arm and began steering her towards the steps down to the lawn .
9 On occasion he took a personal interest in the apprehension and punishment of poachers who took his deer , and his Attorney-General took proceedings in the Star Chamber against offenders in the Wiltshire forests .
10 Then he took a brilliant catch at deep square lag to dismiss Lancashire dangerman Lloyd , and grabbed two wickets with his medium pace for good measure .
11 In that wind the incident could have gone unnoticed , but a penalty was imposed and he took a 5 .
12 Both fell to peeler crab on a 1/0 hook to 15 lb line to give Roy a unique double — before Christmas he took a 4 lb 7 oz flounder from the Exe to set a new best for his club 's inner area record .
13 When he took a closer look he was horrified .
14 He took a nervous sip from his glass .
15 He took a cumbered step forward , and Diniz Vasquez strode into his path and stood unarmed before him .
16 He took a hasty pace towards her , and she flung out a hand .
17 Oh dear , aye , he took a terrible
18 In 1876 he took a similar position at the Blaenavon ironworks in Monmouthshire under the management of Edward Martin .
19 The , the importance of this , is that Freud is often said to have been a Hobbesian thinker , in the sense that , er without necessarily being directly influenced by Hobbes , he took a similar , a similar kind of view , or at least , so it is said .
20 Then he took a loud drink and looked out of the window .
21 He took a keen and sympathetic interest in the education of young engineers and was a member of the governing body of the Midland Institute at Derby .
22 He took a keen interest in the education of his men and in their improvement societies .
23 Throughout this time he took a keen personal interest in the education of young engineers , especially in the Horwich Mechanics ' Institute , which he founded in 1888 .
24 He took a keen interest in the new bulk outloading and intake system and is pictured in the new control room with north west regional director ( right ) and intake operator ( left ) .
25 Burton was so elated at his tough bargaining that he took a rare taxi back to Pelham Crescent , where he met his neighbour , Emlyn Williams , who winkled the details out of him and sent him back for £30 .
26 It was to be the last triumph Chapman was to see at Elland Road , for in the summer of 1916 he took a managerial job at a munitions factory at Barnbow , near Leeds .
27 So he took a young lamb , whose mother had died , and carried it in a basket across the fields to Mrs Hurst 's house .
28 This time he took a six on it .
29 Kite was the danger for the start , but he took a six on the 10th .
30 But his research ended when his grant ran out , and he took a mundane job as a sub-editor on the Sunday Times colour magazine just before the Wapping dispute began .
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