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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He takes his time strolling over , and when he gets here he sits at the far end of the bench like he does n't know me .
2 He sits on a low wall and waits .
3 Now , the elderly man who endured a waiter 's dirty fingers in his lemonade at Montrose could hardly have been more famous or respected , and there he sits in a dirty inn , happy to enjoy a little quiet , and quite at ease to do so , even in the company of one of the most garrulous men in the realm whose nature abhorred a conversational vacuum ; Johnson even expressed a simple delight in being thought as silent as a ghost .
4 David Tory , the president of the Open Software Foundation , has added another directorship to his CV , joining the board of directors at Service Systems International Ltd where he sits alongside an old colleague , chairman of the board Sam Goodner .
5 Should he sit on a select committee or will the work go unnoticed ?
6 He sat beside the wide fires all day , overflowing his stool like a walrus on a rock , half a dozen wooden spoons ready at hand .
7 It was a cold and damp winter , but he recovered slowly and indeed seemed cheerful ; he sat beside the open coal fire in the drawingroom and would sometimes sing music-hall ditties as his wife ministered to him — " coddling " , he used to call it .
8 He sat astride a ladder-backed wooden chair , his legs splayed out in front of him .
9 When he came back in the evening he sat for a long time gazing out across the V-shaped valley leading south .
10 And he sat for a long time in a melancholy reverie as the ants continued to drift down , thinking of the futility of all endeavour .
11 He sat as a Unionist councillor and , when the Unionist Party became dominated by powersharers , he moved to Vanguard , then to Baird 's United Ulster Unionist Party , and only switched to Paisley 's Democratic Unionist Party after the demise of the UUUP .
12 When arrangements were made in the summer of 1278 to establish two permanent circuits of the general eyre he was one of the justices appointed to the ‘ northern ’ circuit and he sat as a junior justice in every eyre of that circuit down to 1288 .
13 Though not a Leveller sympathizer , he sat as a leading London Independent on the committee that drafted the second Agreement of the People .
14 For the next four years he sat as an engrossing clerk on a stool in the dusty office , so thick with dust that it entered the sunbeams ; and bent over crabbed writing in the books , or showed dull clients in to see his father , or sat the examinations , which he passed .
15 He sat on a small stone bench opposite the priest 's house , half dozing , still relishing the memory of his meeting with de Craon .
16 While Auntie Lou set out the food , he sat on a flat rock to recover and talked about the old days .
17 The estimable Anderson spoke half-truths as his friend and fellow bag-carrier , Billy Gunn , now explained as he sat on a green caddies ' bench and waited for the call to duty .
18 He sat on a huge leather chair with a sigh of relief and it was clear to Hari that his leg had been giving him trouble .
19 Fred would listen patiently until he could stand no more and then depart to the small back yard , where he sat on an upturned tea-chest and vowed that one day he would forget how efficient his kitchen hand was and just do away with her .
20 He sat on the appropriate boards of the International Olympic Committee and was President of the General Assembly of International Sports Federations for 17 years .
21 He sat on the low wall surrounding the pier gardens .
22 He sat on the wooden chair in the corner and looked at Lambert as if he were a self-confessed criminal .
23 He sat on the chintz-covered couch to the side of the fireplace and , leaning his head back , looked about him .
24 Back in the room , he made her kneel before him , as he sat on the upright chair .
25 He would catch the bus to Piccadilly Circus — he sat on the top deck and worked on the crossword before turning to the company reports in The Times .
26 He sat on the top step , raised the automatic with both hands and aimed it at the arm that was writhing in the aperture below .
27 He sat on the big table in the mess , one bare foot tucked up , and cut his yellow toe-nails with heavy scissors .
28 ‘ But I think it is a pointless exercise , ’ said Floy , somewhere towards morning , a thin , cold light filtering in through the windows to where he sat at a great desk , his black hair tumbled , hollows in his cheeks , his face white with fatigue .
29 He sat at a makeshift desk of unfinished lumber , and wrote and played with his thinning hair .
30 He sat at a large desk covered with papers , journals , medical books , a portable typewriter pushed to one end .
  Next page