Example sentences of "[conj] he [verb] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He began his political career at St Andrew 's University , where he ran a campaign to elect Tory Nicholas Fairbairn as rector .
2 It is echoed in many of his poems and particularly in ‘ A Farewell ’ , where he describes the rivulet flowing to the sea :
3 This is a slightly different scene to the one Tennyson portrays in the same setting in his poem ‘ The miller 's Daughter ’ , where he describes the miller consuming a beverage :
4 Possibly the earliest mention of what are probably Anglo-Saxon graves is that by the thirteenth-century chronicler Roger of Wendover in his Flores Historiarum where he describes the excavation by monks of St Albans in 1178 of ten human skeletons at Redbourne , Hertfordshire , believing some of them to be the bones of St Amphibalus ( Hewlett 1886 , 115 ) .
5 He was educated at John Kipling 's School in Barnard Castle , where he acquired an interest in mathematics and astronomy .
6 Eventually he managed to sit in a chair unaided and began to attend the hospital school , where he operated a computer with a mouth-held drumstick .
7 Instead ‘ Akkawi was taken back to interrogation where he suffered a heart attack .
8 A few minutes later Silas led Lucy into the office , where he checked the telephone 's answering device for messages , then , having unhooked it from the phone , he said , ‘ There you are — it 's all yours . ’
9 The first young patrolman , PC Bartholomew , took him up to the bedroom , where he checked the body 's pulse at wrist and neck , took its temperature and the temperature of the room .
10 A Corporal was indicating to Lovat where he thought the firing was coming from .
11 Winston Churchill , relieved of his responsibilities , travelled to the United States of America , in March 1945 , where he made a speech in which he made a statement that was to prove profoundly true .
12 In 1872 Ellerton was appointed rector of Hinstock , Shropshire , where he began the research for Notes and Illustrations of Church Hymns ( 1881 ) and to compile with W. Walsham How Children 's Hymns and School Prayers ( 1874 ) .
13 Geoff Griffin pictured on a recent trip to Lord 's , where he took a Test hat-trick and was no-balled for throwing
14 As a student at Columbia University , New York — where he took a degree and a doctorate — and subsequently as a teacher of biochemistry at Boston University , he continued to write in his spare time .
15 A graduate of Birmingham University , where he took a BSc in coal-mining , he joined Manchester Collieries Ltd , in 1944 .
16 He was educated at Eton and Trinity College , Cambridge , where he took a pass degree and gained a BA in 1883 .
17 This was pre-eminently the case where the Area Boards were united in opposing the Central Authority or the Government ( as on the Clow differential ) , though Citrine was more willing to give in to such pressure on matters where he respected the Board Chairmen 's views , such as tariffs , than on matters where he was determined to impose his own , as in labour relations .
18 Gary Corbett , who 's 19 , and from Nailsworth in Gloucestershire , was taken to Bristol Crown Court under escort , where he denied the murder of nine month old Danielle Simpkins , the daughter of his girlfriend at a block of flats at Nailsworth on March 20 last year .
19 He retreated to a side booth where he summoned a waiter , ordered a beer , and watched as the two men went out into the garden at the rear .
20 How he obtained this skill is not recorded , but it may be significant that he visited Ravenna , where he befriended the poet Arator .
21 Born in Galway , studied at Mungret College , Limerick , where he developed a taste for rugby football , and All Hallows College , Dublin , where he was ordained to the priesthood on June 24th , 1944 .
22 He was a remarkable soldier and for his pains was given a domain at Jičín ( where he re-planned the town ) , the dukedom of Friedland and the duchy of Mecklenburg .
23 He came from Yorkshire , I believe , where he owned a mill and he could be quite a difficult man .
24 Harry had Mossop drop him off at Brockenhurst station , where he commenced the journey back to Swindon , happy to find himself alone among anonymous travellers , able to concentrate at last on all the implications of what he had learned .
25 The beefy man climbed down from behind his counter and led Joe to the back of the shop , where he unlocked a door .
26 Yet he had never been further from his native village than the horse and carriage festival forty miles away , where he competed every year .
27 He had nine years at Leeds , where his children grew up and where he became a specialist in building matters and worked closely with architects on the planning of major buildings .
28 After the war , young Fred did a spell of duty in the Far East , mainly Hong Kong , where he became a member of the Marine Band .
29 He was keen to encourage the vocational aspects of art education and attracted into the various departments concerned with commercial art men and women of talent , including Macvyn Wright , Toni del Renzio , Mervyn Peake , Albert Halliwell ( later to follow Johnstone to Central School of Art where he became a catalyst for the teaching of basic design ) and Gertrude Hermes who was responsible for wood-engraving .
30 He went to the College of Physical Science ( later Armstrong College ) , Newcastle upon Tyne ( 1874–7 ) , and then to Emmanuel College , Cambridge ( 1877–81 ) , where he became a scholar in 1879 .
  Next page