Example sentences of "[noun prp] [noun prp] [noun] [pron] [vb past] [pron] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It was invented by Miss Eleanor Coade who changed her title to Mrs Coade to seem more respectable .
2 Dreams which turned her cold even now , when she was wide awake and full of her day-time urgencies , hurrying to make herself pleasant and useful and necessary , if she could , to Miss Gemma Dallam who knew nothing , as yet , of nakedness .
3 Opening design and build company Prodescon 's new Duke Street office he said it is essential that Mr Lamont increases public investment to allow his members to ‘ build their way out of the recession . ’
4 New Zealanders will be taking a special look at Mick Doyle , the hard-running Vancouver Kats centre who learned his rugby in Auckland .
5 At St Inglevert — do you remember , Lancaster ? he was the match of any he met in arms , if not the master , and so were you , and together you two held any two that France could set up against you , and Jean de Boucicaut himself acknowledged it .
6 Two of our greatest fans were the 1968 West Indian Cricket team and the Duke Ellington Orchestra they gave us a standsing ovation .
7 I was thinking about Mrs. Laura Channing who was married to an accountant , and Mrs. Barbara Porter who said she was married to a doctor of philosophy .
8 The other side of the gaiter was evidenced by Archbishop William Temple who found them ‘ the most comfortable leg coverings I have ever worn ’ .
9 Instead she called his friend Heng Yu Wong who found him collapsed in his rom .
10 Jane Hinton-Clifton , who runs the college in Duke Street , said : ‘ I was visited by two officials of the North Yorkshire TEC who told me our funding was being cut off .
11 Rosa was there drinking fruit juice with Fritz Kott and a few other pupils from the Egon Schultz School who greeted her with the same , unanimous question : ‘ What happened ? ’
12 The money will go to establish a scholarship fund in the memory of Dr Clyde Tull who taught her while she was a student there in the early Twenties .
13 Perhaps she reserves her fondest memories for Sergeant Barry Mannakee who became her bodyguard at a time when she felt lost and alone in the royal world .
14 We next hear of it being bought in 1865 by Sir Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy who resold it to a Paris jeweller .
15 Our new chairman is Sir Anthony Cleaver who assumed his responsibilities on 1 July .
16 It has its own associated pattern of atmospheric circulation , named after Sir Gilbert Walker who identified it early in this century ( Figure 3 ) , and it is also associated with changes in the pattern of surface temperature .
17 But it was Sir Norman Brook who identified what to 1980s eyes is the most startling of the missing links in the Cabinet process of the late forties : the lack of any systematic attempt to review long-term public-expenditure trends and the future spending-implications of current policies .
18 The Lido Palace has had many famous visitors , including Sir Winston Churchill who spent his honeymoon here .
19 After defeating countless Orc and Goblin tribes from the Worlds Edge Mountains he led his horde into Ostermark and looted several towns destroying the Temple of Sigmar at Nachtdorf in the process .
20 It was on these three criteria , described by a member of the Stephen Jones group which concocted them as ‘ the best that could be devised in the circumstances ’ , that the 1981–2 ‘ pool ’ allocation was based .
21 He met on Sept. 16 with US President George Bush who repeated his government 's intention to recognize a government which emerged from free elections .
22 He would of course require a pastoral call even if he did not — and his car did not bode well — look like the kind of man Peter might hope for , as a breath of fresh air on the PCC ; as a possible churchwarden in place of old Sir Francis Mayhew who said he 'd done fifteen years which was more than enough ; or even as a parishioner willing to raise the £25,000 that the diocesan architect had said would have to be spent on Loxford church roof within the next three years .
23 It was Sir Keith Joseph who opened her eyes to what was subsequently dubbed ‘ Thatcherism ’ .
24 Illuminated in Tours around 1520 , it contains twelve full-page miniatures of the emperors and was possibly made for the library of Francois I. The manuscript has a distinguished provenance : it belonged at the Jesuit College de Clermont Library in Paris and later to the celebrated English collector Sir Thomas Phillips who considered it among the finest of his 60,000 manuscripts .
25 ‘ The king my father learned of my regard for yourself from Sir Thomas Vaughan who saw it as his duty to inform him , ’ Edward told her with notable reluctance .
26 In my youth I could read Jules Verne and H. G. Wells who took their hero explorers to the moon and to the depths of the ocean , but the imaginary worlds of Rider Haggard and Conan Doyle were still located here on earth in unmapped corners of Africa and South America .
27 It was Ninette de Valois who put him in touch with John Piper , whose work he had already known and admired before leaving Cape Town , although only from reproductions , just as much as his musical knowledge came from recordings .
28 The French forces won back the city , but when they reached the residence of Ho Chi Minh they found he had gone .
29 Freeman has given the example of a West Riding firm which despatched its woollen goods entirely by road , and it was the customers who paid carriage .
30 In explanation Van Valen put forward what he termed the Red Queen 's hypothesis , named after the Lewis Carroll character who found it took all the running one can do to keep in the same place .
  Next page