Example sentences of "he stood [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Thus when Clarkson spoke movingly to the gathered World Convention of 1840 he was intended to symbolise continuity and provide in what he stood for a unifying focus .
2 Retreating to the edge of the clearing , he stood for a full five minutes , listening intently to the night sounds for anything out of place .
3 Creed had requisitioned an open car , and he stood for the entire procession , as a mark of his own personal respect for the deceased .
4 In 1964 he stood for the pretty safe ( at the time ) Conservative seat of Glasgow Pollok .
5 GERALD ANNESLEY , one of Ulster 's most colourful landowners who has died aged 86 , caused a mild sensation in the general election of 1951 when , although a former chairman of the local Unionist party , he stood as a Protestant Irish Nationalist candidate for South Down .
6 In 1981 he was chairman of the Computer Retailers ' Association , and he stood as a local government candidate for Rother Valley in the 1987 General Election .
7 He stood as the Liberal Party candidate in Edinburgh in the 1966 and 1970 elections and joined the BNP two years ago .
8 In 1941 he stood as an independent candidate in four by-elections ; but although he retained his deposit on each occasion , there was to be no political comeback for this highly cantankerous patriot .
9 Drawing a deep breath to hide a flicker of nervousness , he stood at the great carved oak lectern and looked along the stalls at the nuns who sat before him there , so composed in their wimples of white and the dark garb of their Order .
10 He stood at the ornate head of the stairs and listened .
11 He stood beside a muddy soccer pitch .
12 He stood beside the broken glass of his front door as he described how the white neighbours — assisted by two West Indian girls — hauled him into the court and beat him .
13 Having managed to come by a decent bit of steak and kidney , he stood over the young maid , who came in once a week , until she had managed to produce a pie , later warmed up for dinner in the microwave .
14 For a few months he stood on a European par with Adler and Liebknecht and tried to take responsibility for Russians interned after the Brest–Litovsk peace .
15 The man refused to come clear ; he stood on the far side of the horse , soothing the animal and examining the fresh wound on its neck .
16 He stood on the bottom step long after the heavy metal grids had been pulled across the foyer and the last of the cinema lights turned off .
17 No , the sea , said Wilkie , and she looked out , at the Stella Maris , anchored off the coast , and there he stood on the curving prow , pale on the pale sky , with a triangular patch of yellow like a painted sun — Van Gogh chrome , not Renaissance gilt — between his thighs and his limbs creamy-brown like the foam on the new cappuccino coffee .
18 His heart thumped as he stood on the Yugoslav border and stared through the night at the nearby fields in Hungary .
19 She had a great temptation to rest against him , but he stood with a swift movement that was all anger and sarcasm .
20 He stood with the conical helmet cradled clumsily under his arm .
21 He stood outside the low , broad door , listening , then put his hand out flat against the wood and gently pushed .
22 He stood in a familiar , flamboyant posture with his hands on his hips and his chin stuck out , constantly turning his head from left to right and back again , to take in his entire audience .
23 ‘ So you are writing about those things , ’ another Israeli said as he stood in a narrow , shaded lane .
24 He stood in the shattered doorway , confronting his monster , a shadow among shadows .
25 No wonder Mosley was smiling as he stood in the cast council chamber .
26 He stood in the front row of the congregation immediately beneath one of the huge , heavily-ornamented lecterns , and during the readings his rapt , upturned face caught the light from the lectern 's candles .
27 As he stood in the drizzling rain he welcomed it : the contrast in temperature was huge compared with Helsinki .
28 So there he stood in the Dirty Duck , opposite Shakespeare 's Memorial Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon , 1951 , Prince of the heap .
29 It had seemed to him that her eyes looked right into his as he stood in the darkened hall , staring into the room .
30 He stood in the damp boots that leaked the snow wet to his socks , and he hated the man who sat at the desk .
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