Example sentences of "lead [pers pn] through the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | The beadle led them through the gloomy rooms off the main hall where the Court of Common Pleas , Court of Chancery and Court of Requests sat , and down a warren of lime-washed corridors until he stopped in front of a door and rapped noisily with his wand . |
2 | He led me through the narrow alleys of the Old City until we came to a lane barely two feet wide . |
3 | As he led me through the back door and on to the waste ground he used as an unofficial parking lot , he said : ‘ Good runner , only thirty thousand on the clock . ’ |
4 | A shadow fell across my sunny table and I looked up to find Kenneth who 'd been on a recce of the hospital , so after a lunch of ribs , skins , wings and blueberry pie , he was able to lead me through the appropriate doors of the vast , multi-entranced building . |
5 | Agnese was leading them through the front door into a cool tiled hallway , strewn with locally woven rugs and sweet with the delicate scent of freesias . |
6 | ‘ I fancy you , Matt , ’ Georgina said , leading him through the crowded room . |
7 | Ross said , taking hold of her arm and leading her through the wide arched entrance of the building , towards a bank of lifts . |
8 | He led her through the crowded flat to the kitchen and poured her a glass of wine . |
9 | ‘ Pringle 's used to have a Directors ' Dining Room , with their own cook , ’ Wilcox explained as he led her through the drab corridors of the administration block , and out across a yard where fresh snow was already covering the footpath that had been cleared . |
10 | I took Montaine by the hand and led her through the empty rooms … there were very many . |
11 | They led him through the great court and round the cloister to the flank of the east end of the church , where the mitred graves of the abbots lay . |
12 | She led him through the main tannery to where a pile of raw sheep skins lay , and still with her light eyes on him lay down . |
13 | Take A55 to St. Asapah , skirt bottom of Denbigh and go on through to Ruthin from which A525 will lead you through the delightful Nantygarth Pass . |