Example sentences of "[num] he [vb past] " in BNC.

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1 The latest medical theories suggest that Mozart 's last illness had its roots in the various serious infections he had suffered as a child : on the early trip to Paris and London he had contracted rheumatic fever , tonsillitis. and typhoid fever ; in 1167 he had caught smallpox ; and in Italy he seems to have had bronchitis and yellow jaundice .
2 In the spring of 1167 he led an army into the Auvergne , right on the eastern border of Aquitaine , in order to lay waste the land of Count William of Auvergne , who seems to have dispossessed his nephew the young Count .
3 In 1895 he became gas engineer and in 1900 transferred to a similar post on the Midland Railway at Derby , where he became assistant works manager in 1905 , works manager in 1907 , and chief mechanical engineer in 1909 .
4 In 1895 he became secretary to the British Association seismological committee for study of earth tremors and the following year he and the seismologist John Milne [ q.v. ] , newly returned from his pioneering work in Japan , became joint secretaries of its newly established subcommittee for seismological investigation , until Davison retired from this position in 1899 .
5 In 1895 he became examining chaplain to the bishop of Eastern Equatorial Africa , Alfred Tucker [ q.v . ] .
6 In 1895 he began to build his first full-size glider , the Bat ; it had pronounced dihedral , and was fitted with a rudder but no tailplane .
7 In 1895 he went to the new colony of Rhodesia and became a trooper in the Matabeleland regiment of the British South Africa Police .
8 In 1895 he married Katherine Mary , daughter of Thomas McEwen , dominie of Baldernock School .
9 In 1895 he married Ethel Louisa , daughter of John Robert Griffith , a solicitor , of Llanrwst , north Wales .
10 In 1895 he married Emmie Needham ( died 1934 ) , daughter of Philip Smith .
11 In 1895 he married Rhoda , daughter of Colin Gibb Lawrence , bookkeeper , of Brechin .
12 In 1895 he married Nellie Dacey , daughter of a Sheffield railway guard .
13 Promoted to Field Marshall in 1895 he died in 1914 of pneumonia at the Front in France where he was visiting Indian divisions .
14 In 1895 he instituted the National Art Survey to record all pre-eighteenth-century buildings .
15 In 1895 he contested West Leeds as a Conservative against Herbert ( later Viscount ) Gladstone [ q.v. ] and was defeated by only ninety-six votes .
16 In 1895 he entered the alkali business .
17 In April 1895 he discussed the construction of the Bat with Otto Lilienthal , the German hang-gliding pioneer , and learned a great deal about the practical problems of controlling hang-gliders in the air .
18 In 1465 he received the most valuable component of his early endowment , the duchy lordships of Bolingbroke ( Lincs . ) ,
19 In 1465 he received the most valuable component of his early endowment , the duchy lordships of Bolingbroke ( Lincs . ) ,
20 In 1465 he wrote that he wished to have his doublet made of worsted ‘ for the worship of Norfolk ’ ( 17 , iv , 188 ) .
21 In 1876 he married Marian , daughter of John Deakin Heaton , physician , of Claremont , Leeds , but she died following the birth of their daughter in 1878 .
22 This was indeed the case in the original proposal of Boltzmann , when in 1876 he sought to explain the experiments of Weber and Kohlrausch on the elastic after-effect in twisted wires .
23 In 1876 he took a similar position at the Blaenavon ironworks in Monmouthshire under the management of Edward Martin .
24 In 1876 he said the nationality problem in Eastern Europe was not ‘ worth the healthy bones of a Pomeranian musketeer ’ .
25 in 1876 he became a research assistant to P. G. Tait [ q.v. ] , professor of natural philosophy .
26 His unfortunate appearance , and lack of education , was offset by a compelling personality , and in 1876 he embarked on an affair with a neighbour , the much younger Katherine Dyson .
27 In 1876 he built a high water tower , topped for a time with a telescope .
28 During 1876 he built new premises on the outskirts of Aberdeen , to cope with the increased demand .
29 In 1876 he decided to be an architect , the following year becoming articled to Basil Champneys [ q.v . ] .
30 From 1873 to 1876 he acted as marine superintendent with Hargrove , Fergusson & Jackson , for whom he constructed both ships and machinery , striving always to achieve greater power , efficiency , and economy .
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