Example sentences of "[noun pl] [was/were] [verb] [adv prt] to [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Then , when her legs were lifted on to the couch , the croak turned into a stilted scream as she cried , ‘ No ! |
2 | Readers were settling down to the novel 's opening instalment — not a venture to be recommended for ‘ people with weak nerves ’ remarked Strakhov , the gifted critic — when a murder story broke in the newspapers . |
3 | Seven hundred reports of sightings were phoned in to the Starling Squad , to be pinpointed on a map of Leicestershire . |
4 | ‘ Some of the other kids were going down to the Ash Grove later , ’ she complained . |
5 | Most of their funds were lent back to the personal sector . |
6 | RECRUITS were bused in to the strike-hit Timex factory in Dundee yesterday , replacements for some of the 300 workers sacked during the dispute . |
7 | Britain under Harold Macmillan was booming and new Austins and Morrises were flooding on to the country 's antiquated roads . |
8 | At less exalted levels of society , economies had to be made ; often many subjects were crammed on to a single plate . |
9 | By statistical analysis of his surveys he showed that the megaliths were set out to a common unit of measurement , the megalithic yard of 0.83 m. , not in simple circles but in circular arcs centred on right-angled triangles . |
10 | As Ashi dressed swiftly her eyes were drawn back to the carriage clock . |
11 | Her eyes were drawn back to the set , where Dane was still holding court . |
12 | Then , my eyes were lifted up to the hill which overshadows the old city . |
13 | The headman issued vouchers , and the animals were brought back to the slaughterhouse with their papers in order . |
14 | The fact that visiting supporters were allowed in to the same terracing , even though distinctly segregated , was a constant source of irritation to many Oxford fans , and it was often pointed to as an explanation for the occurrence of ‘ bovver ’ . |
15 | Ray Angel put the final touches , adding echo and reverberation when the voices were relayed down to the studio floor . |
16 | Fig. 3 showed that the clones of RAP74 whose C-terminal sequences were deleted up to the 171th amino acid residue ( lanes 2,3 and 4 ) stimulated the CAT activity to the same extent as the wild type clone , but further deletion of the C-terminal sequence up to the 128th residue resulted in a complete loss of the CAT activity ( lane 5 ) . |
17 | The police soon banned these as offensive weapons , especially when steel spikes were welded on to the toecaps , and more subtle weapons had to be found . |
18 | Standing in the Platz in her elegant coat and furs Erika was on the verge of tears : first the books were thrown on to the flames and then , in a terrible and inevitable sequence , human beings were put into the incinerators . |
19 | At that time the tax that banks deducted from interest payments to depositors was passed on to the taxmen each quarter . |
20 | The wounded were treated by the Commando 's calm Irish doctor , Captain Sam Corry RAMC , who remained unruffled by the turmoil , and the casualties were sent out to the ships . |
21 | My parents were pointing up to a beam of light and saying ‘ Dumbo ’ . |
22 | In the final analysis the need for a swift response to an immediate housing shortage after the war painted almost inevitably to a large-scale local authority housing programme , rather than face a period of delay while housing associations were geared up to the task . |
23 | As for the rest of NATO , the cause of world peace , not to say sanity , would be served if these countries were to look back to the decision of 1979 and to admit , even to themselves , that they were wrong . |
24 | ‘ Substantial rents were paid over to the Crown Estate during the last five-year period when the industry was losing money . |
25 | In London every magistrates ' court and police station had a collecting box and proceeds were dealt out to the needy , often those appearing on charges . |
26 | Yesterday as 390 of his old workmates were thrown on to the dole with him , Mike said : ‘ It 's like somebody kicked you in the guts . |
27 | Cargoes were off-loaded on to the stone docks , and again they caught the sharp pungency of unknown spices . |
28 | It was still in the days when airmen 's tunics were buttoned UP to the neck . |
29 | The interim report of the Degree Courses Review Group was discussed and DAB 's concerns were passed back to the group . |
30 | However , fourteenth-century people were sometimes buried with a purchased Indulgence , and there is at the Ashmolean Museum , Oxford , a small latten figure , not much more than four inches high , of a man in a winding-sheet which might have been enclosed within the folds of the shroud , in the same way that stamped leaden crosses were used up to the seventeenth century , to foil Satan 's attempts to claim the deceased 's soul as his own ; the date of manufacture of the Ashmolean item is indeterminate , but it seems doubtful that such an item would have been produced much after c.1550 . |