Example sentences of "[conj] [was/were] [verb] [adv prt] in the " in BNC.

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1 He 's in one of those Victorian institutions that were built out in the countryside so the inmates would n't contaminate decent citizens .
2 No clear distinction could yet be made between the wholesale and retail trades that were carried on in the ‘ shops ’ in the historic centre of the city .
3 But the asinine policies that were brought through in the th er in the Thatcher era they still are here with us , no matter how they try to get shut of them , the poll tax which has been referred to by Councillor is confusion at its best .
4 The numerous non-manufacturing subsidiaries ( such as travel agencies , restaurants and computer software firms ) that were set up in the late 1980s are most vulnerable .
5 Charles could see at first-hand the tension that was building up in the vast depressing wastelands of the inner cities , where young people had no work , no ambition , no feeling of belonging , no pride in their surroundings — nothing , in fact , to get out of bed for in the mornings .
6 There was no reason , however , to link the unrest that was brewing up in the country with the Kamalian dictator .
7 The dismantling of the Via dei Fori Imperiali and the creation of an archaeological park is an idea that was floated back in the days of Napoleonic occupation .
8 He was not involved in any way with the mining that was carried on in the surrounding area , but he was greatly affected by the frequent serious and often fatal accidents suffered by the miners through premature blasting explosions .
9 One of the initiatives er was er the Congress the Wa all Wales Congress that was set up in the miner 's strike for instance .
10 People had been very cold and were sloshing about in the mud from the day before .
11 Nobly , you saved my life , and were struck down in the doing of it .
12 Other lesser interests and associations continued to exist but they were excluded from influence in crucial areas of public policy and were left out in the political cold .
13 She read it idiotically at least three times , until she 'd convinced herself there was no hidden psychological message in the bare statement of fact , and then realised that someone had just come in the front door of the flat and was moving around in the hall .
14 They just went in head first and was swallowed up in the road .
15 Behind the window , the putty face watched as a Moran , large and grey-speckled with red comb and wattles picked her way across the gravel carriage sweep , paused for a moment beside the bed of unpruned roses and was swallowed up in the shadows of the shrubbery .
16 The scale of fees has been simplified and was set out in the last Q.T. notes ( gold paper again ) £12 per annum for teachers living within 50 miles of their training venue £10 per annum for those outside a 50 mile radius
17 Midfielder Scott Sellars was sold to Blackburn for £35,000 and was bought back in the summer for £750,000 .
18 The moon , I thought briefly , had come down from the sky and was dancing about in the wood not far ahead .
19 James offered his services to the Chester Beatty in 1969 and was taken on in the Islamic section .
20 Steve Warwick scored the second goal and was brought down in the area , enabling Alton to get their third in a 3–1 home win .
21 It will be a generation or two no doubt before this determinedly old-fashioned room acknowledges one of the most remarkable of post-1945 French writers , the critic Roland Barthes , who was the complete Parisian intellectual but was brought up in the Basque country , went to school in Bayonne and all his life kept his house along the Adour , at tire .
22 One son , for example , was sometimes not allowed to sleep in the house , but was left out in the garden at night .
23 As was pointed out in the judgment , ‘ In some contractual relationships , for example life assurance and pensions schemes — some aspects of the law regulating conditions of employment , and … various state-run schemes such as national insurance ’ , 35 it is ultimately a matter for the parties concerned whether the individual should be treated as a man or a woman .
24 We wish to apologize to him , and make it clear , as was pointed out in the article , that he is a man of the utmost integrity who is a good example for kids today .
25 The whole poem , at this stage as was pointed out in the section on Wordsworth 's creed uses language ambiguously , though it must be obvious that he does believe in ‘ something out there ’ .
26 As was pointed out in the previous chapter , the plan of the Victorian house and the Victorian city have this in common : that both are so designed that the few who live on the privileged side of the divide need know nothing of the many who are crowded beyond it into a fraction of the space .
27 As was pointed out in the previous chapter , substantial progress has been made in reducing overcrowding , as of facially defined .
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