Example sentences of "[pos pn] [noun] [vb past] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 The DHSS were playing me up over the removal grant , so one of my sons went up to the house to see if there were any letters — everything had been smashed , crocks were smashed and the beds were slashed .
2 Then one of my sons went down into the village to see if the army had left , He came back to tell us that they had destroyed everything , that they had taken all the maize , all the cows and had burnt every house in sight .
3 and my knickers fell down in the snow .
4 It so happened that on one of these Sundays my CO strolled by at the same time , and the AOC asked him why he had not seen Mahaddie for a pilot 's course .
5 I had just winched in the staysail 's port sheet when the explosion sounded , or something so like an explosion that I instinctively cowered by Wavebreaker 's rail as my mind whipped back to the crash of practice shells ripping through the sleet in Norway .
6 My mind went back to the scene in that bedroom and the sliding doors to the paved patio .
7 My mind flew back to the sight of The Fat Controller 's cigar .
8 My mind turned back to the man Mrs Bradshaw had accosted in the garden , but I knew of no one who bore me that kind of grudge or , if he did , would take it out on me in such a petty and spiteful way .
9 My weight settled back on the earth and I felt nothing but staggering agony and could n't think connectedly until it abated .
10 Due to my forward speed the mat and my feet ended up under the AOC 's desk at the same time saluted , and my Wolseley sun helmet sped to the opposite corner of the room .
11 My work came out of the social situation within which I found myself … ’
12 As Frankenstein 's gaze had recently done , my gaze turned up to the ceiling , beyond which lay the laboratory — with all its gruesome secrets now accessible to me !
13 we had our red and white rosettes and when our , I was sitting watching the match and when they scored the goal my slippers went up in the air .
14 First Mrs Agnes McGuinness : ‘ My husband went out on the Saturday and I did n't see him again until the Sunday morning .
15 My head bobbed out into the cold dry air .
16 He struck me hard across the mouth so that my head cracked back against the bathroom wall .
17 My friend went on down the winding road for about two miles , finishing at the quayside , where he rapped smartly on a door .
18 Back in Cardiff , my name went up on the Honours Board and my father , in the last year before his retirement , quietly enjoyed the thought that I was to spend at least part of my life in the county in which his father had been born .
19 Our fourth child had been born 10 years previously and I do n't expect anyone believed there would be any more , but my wife and I thought we were getting too old too quickly , so we would have another two ; and on November 5 that year my wife went down to the bonfire which was already alight and saw on top of it a dropside cot she had been keeping , and which had served the four children , a relatively new carricot , and other items of that sort .
20 For all that has happened , I could n't stop watching for her figure as my train pulled out into the bright sunlight and the rails took me … ’ .
21 It was er he had had it since my grandfather had had the same place as a blacksmith 's shop and then my father followed on with the garage with cycles first of all , and then when the motor trade came in , he started in motors repairing .
22 Once when Hugh Dalton , the local MP and a Cabinet Minister , was about to open a factory by snipping the red tape with a pair of ornamental scissors , my father stepped out of the crowd , took the scissors and demanded a house as a disabled ex-serviceman .
23 So my father went over on the Monday evening and after such a a young man paid such interest in the garden and paying so much compliments , Well you ca n't go home without coming in for a cup of tea .
24 Next day my father went back to the war and my mother back to the boarding school where she was on teaching practice as a French assistante , and spoke to the future wives of doctors and civil servants : Je suis , tu es , il est , nous sommes .
25 My father went off to the park .
26 My father came back with the cross ; his friend , Major Hope , paid for my mother 's treatment .
27 My father put up on the sofa in the big living-room next to my bedroom , which I had claimed as my study .
28 My supper flapped off round the corner in a storm of feathers with the blood coming out of the side of its beak .
29 The red of my anger bubbled up like the rosy orange juice squeezed by the vendors ' machines in the main street in our village .
30 My pursuers swarmed over into the lane and seized me .
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