Example sentences of "was [adv] [art] [adj] [noun] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | He was running what was mostly a sixties disco with a sprinkling of classic rock and only a few recent standards . |
2 | Theodora realised this was rather a lame attempt on her part to steer clear of what was increasingly looking like a nasty piece of wreckage . |
3 | There was something rather reckless in my attending the present lectures at all , because it was in the depths of winter , and from where I now lived it was rather a long walk to the town — over a mile , at any rate . |
4 | It was rather a joint discussion of whether it was better to precipitate a strike or the unemployment which would result from continuing the present terms . |
5 | ‘ Fenella and I would set out a day later , ’ he said , looking at Fenella and thinking that she was rather a nice sort of companion to be having on a journey . |
6 | Remaindering was rather a dirty word in the book trade , and those involved were known as ‘ vultures ’ and ‘ scavengers ’ . |
7 | As a matter of fact it was rather a hush-hush sort of business . |
8 | ‘ Go safely , Floy , ’ whispered Fenella , who thought it safer not to say more , and then one of the stable hands brought the second horse forward and Floy found , as Snodgrass had , that it was actually quite easy to spring into the saddle and it was rather a safe feeling to be seated astride a horse like this . |
9 | It was rather a huge success in sociopolitical terms , in vastly expanding the range of the shareholding classes . |
10 | It was rather an ex-Pharisee opponent of the gospel , converted through the direct agency of God and thrust out on the mission at the direct leading of the Lord the Spirit . |
11 | It was rather an important event for me in those days , as you can imagine . |
12 | The latter has improved again since — he was most a impressive winner on his reappearance at Newbury last month — and with fitness on his side he is very hard to oppose . |
13 | It was effectively a semi final as the two group leaders go straight to the final , and it was between England and Spain all the way . |
14 | What was effectively a general strike by civil servants and private-sector workers — the so-called " Dead City Campaign " — had virtually shut down most towns from each Monday to Friday since June 24 , with commercial activity resuming on Saturdays and Sundays to allow people to shop . |
15 | From then until the dissolution of the Empire by Napoleon in 1806 the Imperial crown was effectively the hereditary possession of the Habsburg family . |
16 | But this was fundamentally a different issue to whether mentally handicapped people should themselves be in institutions essentially built to treat and care for people in need of constant medical aid . |
17 | Some fine and competitive rallying in which was arguably the best match of the three days , saw her come very close to Audra Keller , a 19 year old form Tennessee who was playing in her third consecutive Maureen Connolly Cup event . |
18 | The levy in mass against the Gauls is still mentioned in the charter granted to the " colonia Genetiva Julia " in Spain in 44 B.C. , when it was presumably a simple piece of antiquarianism , if it did not allude to Caesar 's recent wars . |
19 | Lyons was chosen because it was believed to offer a more practical training than Alfort ( especially in the control of cattle plagues ) and was presumably a safe distance from revolutionary Paris . |
20 | Since mallards do not dive there was presumably no great competition between the two species for food but with over 100 birds on such a small stretch of water it was difficult to see how there could be enough to go round . |
21 | That talent was presumably the main reason for his appointment , and that 's only right and proper because if there 's one thing England can learn from Bob Dwyer , it is that you sometimes have to be prepared to let a young side lose in the short-term to gain in the long-term . |
22 | The right to that appointment was presumably an established perquisite of the chief steward . |
23 | The right to that appointment was presumably an established perquisite of the chief steward . |
24 | ‘ Well , see , in the mid and late '70s I think the music industry dropped the ball , and I think that 's why there was rarely a good band in the '80s . |
25 | Government itself was rarely the active initiator in the move to criminalize immorality . |
26 | In bulk output , Great Britain was outstandingly the biggest producer of textiles , for example . |
27 | In fact , ‘ I shot The Sheriff ’ was merely a Marleyised version of the storyline in a song that The Wailers had used as a vocal showcase since the late '60s , The Impressions ' ‘ Keep On Moving ’ . |
28 | ( This had no bearing on the incinerable nature of the occasion ; it was merely a great favourite of us both . ) |
29 | In 1988–89 Mantes produced no speciality films — it was merely a weak echo of Swindon . |
30 | Another important aspect of this is the issue of whether community economic development was merely a palliative measure with limited potential for addressing the problems of unemployment and deprivation experienced in areas such as West Belfast . |