Example sentences of "[vb past] [verb] [adv prt] [prep] a [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | It was perhaps ironic that having decided to dedicate the rest of his career to the private sector that Cuckney became caught up in a major government row when he took over as chairman of Westland Group . |
2 | But I cooled him out and he agreed to come along to a new rehearsal place that we 'd found , The Rose And Crown in Wandsworth . |
3 | Whether she would in fact have opened the door and tried to jump out of a moving vehicle proved to be an academic question . |
4 | They went away thanking her for her help , and promised to come back in a few weeks ' time when Bruno 's booster injection was due . |
5 | I do n't know how or why it worked , but I stopped waking up in a cold sweat . |
6 | They were hooting and flapping their great woolly arms as they tried to climb on to a private jetty . |
7 | The stunt — which involved jumping out of a hot air balloon attached to a piece of elastic — has never been attempted in Britain before . |
8 | Schools went in for a lot of physical education , ‘ drill ’ , which involved jumping about in a drafty hall with your skirt tucked into your knickers if you were female . |
9 | The journalists claim in ‘ Ambush : The War Between The SAS and the IRA ’ that the SAS man drove a lorry identical to the ex-UDR man 's and pretended to break down on a lonely Tyrone road . |
10 | Say you got me to Ireland and dropped me off , then got shot down by a British night-fighter off the French coast on your way back . |
11 | Janine took a deep breath and all the fears and worries inside her came tumbling out like a great canker that had finally burst . |
12 | A second or two later , everything came crashing down in a big heap on the railway line below . |
13 | He had borrowed the ledger one night and read how a member of the Longford militia came galloping up on a foam-flecked horse to the doors of Carewscourt , yelling that the French and Irish had scattered Lake 's army to the four winds and that they were coming south and for everyone to flee , flee , flee if they valued their lives … . |
14 | The jockey 's race never stops … never stalls … so far this season Richard Dunwoody has had three hundred and sixty nine rides … he should be celebrating his century of winners any day … only one man can catch him and stop him and that 's Peter Scudamore … at Wincanton this week the reigning champion came galloping back with a winning treble … |
15 | ‘ It all seemed to go on for a long time , but it must have been just a few seconds . ’ |
16 | It seemed to go on for a long time . |
17 | From the fishing bag he took a scope sight and two boxes of ammunition , one of them depleted from the sighting-in that he 'd carried out in a deserted glen on the drive south . |
18 | After countless ages I seemed to come back to a real realisation that I was continuing to breathe , even if with difficulty , and did n't seem in immediate danger of stopping . |
19 | He 'd met up with a marvellous girl in Munster , anyway ; then a fully consenting Hausfrau from Hamburg … and so it had gone on . |
20 | She 'd grown up into a beautiful fair girl , and every lad in the county had his eye on her , as Billy knew from all the women 's gossip . |
21 | The problems of Russia suddenly became topical two years ago at school , and although I 'd grown up with a faint mistrust of ‘ Commies ’ , in 1988 I started writing to Murat , a young Russian . |
22 | The Woman 's voice came swimming out of a great blankness , forcing itself on him . |
23 | To many of us inside the game of golf , Froggy seemed to stick out like a sore thumb in this world of smooth agents , six-figure endorsement contracts and marketing strategies . |
24 | But I 'm , but I 'm sure it 'd got up to a hundred and something pounds . |
25 | Certainly Leicestershire 's team manager Jack Birkenshaw has no doubt about the credentials of the 27-year-old quickie , whose career took off when umpire Allan Jones , a former fast bowler himself , advised coming in off a straight rather than a curved run . |
26 | But she was always there when he came back from real or imagined expeditions , not like his father who 'd walked out after a drunken row one night . |
27 | Mind , it was the surprise of me life to 'ear you 'd teamed up with a fly female pickpocket , I did n't know you was one of the lads . ’ |
28 | Manchester United at home to Bolton were held to a goal-less first half first forty five minutes , and they had to wait until the seventy seventh minute before taking the lead through Hughes , and United go through with a one nil win . |
29 | She 'd gone on into a book-lined room which appeared to be in use as an office , and she was placing the shotgun along with two others in a locking steel cabinet . |
30 | Bewildered , she felt as if she 'd stepped back into a dark cave and was falling into the unknown . |