Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] [vb pp] for [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | It was like from head to toe there was these marks on my body where I had bruises , and I got done for police assault — I could n't believe it ! |
2 | I got paid for August which was quite clever really cos my date would of been sort of half way through to book my holiday |
3 | I 'd applied for Mastermind in three previous years but was unsuccessful and even had an audition in 1989 . ’ |
4 | It was the first airedale I 'd seen for years , maybe the first since the two that shadowed my childhood . |
5 | I was standing in the back of a small boat , drifting down some English river I 've never seen — the kind with dappled , overhang-ing leaves reflected in the water — grasping a punt-pole in my hands and propelling the flat boat like it was something I 'd done for years . |
6 | ‘ It was the first speech I 'd made for ages . |
7 | However , I knew at least a couple of players because I 'd caddied for Roger Fidler in the 1977 British Open while I was still an assistant , and I 'd also carried Florentina Melina 's bag . |
8 | I had dressed as well as I could that morning , in more or less the same stuff I 'd worn for Grandma Margot 's funeral . |
9 | So that black top that sweatshirt top that I 'd got for Lee , it was seventeen ninety nine , you got that for thirteen pounds , forty five erm thirty two pound off . |
10 | The note I 'd left for Tremayne , ‘ GONE OUT WITH HARRY , BACK FOR GRUB was still pinned to the corkboard . |
11 | I had one of the best nights I 'd had for ages , and slept through the rest of the ebb and the whole of the flood . |
12 | When I left school , which was in nineteen thirty , it was a bad time for employment , there was a lot of unemploy unemployed people and I tried and tried and eventually I was offered a job at the Bloxwich Lock and Stamping Company in Bell Lane Alexander works , it was er er Squires 's were , er it 's a family er er concern , and erm it was the first offer I 'd had for employment so I took it . |
13 | In the bedroom I get changed for work . |
14 | It 's the nagging curse which afflicts all consumers — lingering doubts after you get it home , like ‘ should I have opted for Brand X instead of Brand Y ’ . |
15 | I had met him a couple of times , and he had submitted a paper I had written for publication in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society . |
16 | Those were the words that I had written for Antoinette ! |
17 | I took stock of my fur-lined leather jacket which I had prized for years , and I did n't see any problem . |
18 | I had hoped for Eric 's face , or some further clue about what was going to happen , but I got nothing . |
19 | It feels cold : I had hoped for spring but what I am finding is winter . |
20 | Although I had hoped for justice and understanding when my story was known , that was not to be . |
21 | One minute dangling on the end of a rope ; the next a reprieve , a bumpy ride through Paris , followed by the sweetest bread and most fragrant wine I had tasted for months . |
22 | What I had mistaken for affectation was nothing but concentration . |
23 | I was happier than I had felt for months . |
24 | Then you walked into my life , and I suddenly realised that what I had felt for Claire may have been sexual attraction , but it was never love . ’ |
25 | Prior to my fifteenth birthday I had asked for train sets and cowboy suits for Xmas and birthdays , and until I was eighteen I spent Saturday afternoons making tea and sandwiches for my Mam and some girls from school as they talked endlessly of ‘ fellas ’ and clothes and make-up — subjects never of any interest to me . |
26 | ‘ Newcastle claimed they pulled out because I had gone for talks with Wimbledon . |
27 | I had gone for coffee in the student room in order to avoid my colleagues . |
28 | Later I had the honour and privilege of meeting Odette Churchill , the heroine of the French Resistance , someone I had admired for years , ever since reading about her exploits when she received her medal after the war . |
29 | Major Hal , who met us on arrival , insisted that I had qualified for membership in the ‘ Short-Snorters ’ Club ’ . |
30 | I decided that as I had worked for Harold Wilson and enjoyed his total confidence for several years , there was some duty to try to deter him from the worst mistakes . |