Example sentences of "sat for [art] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 After the girls had gone I sat for a little time , thinking .
2 Upstream , through the gorge known as the Wachau , runs one of the prettiest stretches of the river and I sat for a pleasant hour on its embankment watching the swallows skim its waters .
3 Back home safely , I made a cuppa and sat for a good hour revelling in my favourite magazine .
4 I sat for a long while , clutching the unfinished poem , gazing beyond it .
5 She sat for a long while , until her limbs became cold and stiff and her mind numb with tiredness and misery .
6 Moran sat for a long time .
7 They sat for a long time in silence watching the Atlantic crash down on the empty shore .
8 Afterwards I sat for a long time trying to reconcile myself to these new ideas .
9 But the old Jew sat for a long time in silence as the wind and rain in the darkness outside lashed at the windows of Damiani 's old home .
10 When he came back in the evening he sat for a long time gazing out across the V-shaped valley leading south .
11 The Collector sat for a long time contemplating his boots which , because of the dampness , had become covered in green mould .
12 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 .
13 Alice went to a cafe in Finchley Road , and sat for a long time quietly by herself over strong coffee .
14 She read it through and then sat for a long time on the white strips of the reclining chair in which she had first seen Signor Fixit .
15 They sat for a long time on brown plastic seats in a white corridor .
16 Andrus sat for a long time .
17 Fifty-three were the sons of MPs ( 18 per cent , much like the 17 per cent of Liberals ) and twelve of these sat for the same seat , although few like Stanley Baldwin succeeded directly ; fifteen of these fifty-three were sons of Liberals , further evidence of the value of recruits brought over in 1886 .
18 A YOUNGER set of judges would provide a better image to the public : so says Mr Harold Hewitt , who last weekend sat for the last time , retiring for the second time at the age of 75 .
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