Example sentences of "[vb past] [vb pp] [prep] [adv] [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ Not long after he contacted me again , said he 'd moved to yet another firm and made a completely different recommendation .
2 She really would have preferred a cup of tea , but could n't refuse when they 'd gone to so much trouble .
3 I listened with fascination to this insider viewpoint , and the moody Miss Brickell suddenly became a real person , not a pathetic collection of dry bones , but a mixed-up pulsating young woman full of strong urges and stronger guilts who 'd piled on too much pressure , loaded her need of penitence and her heavy desires and perhaps finally her pregnancy onto someone who could n't bear it all , and who 'd seen a violent way to escape her .
4 They said they felt marginalised from almost all television programmes , pointing out that young people 's concerns are rarely covered .
5 Because women have not had the same historical relation of identity to origin , institution , production , that men have had , women have not , I think , ( collectively ) felt burdened by too much Self , Ego , Cogito , etc .
6 The defence argument put paid to yet another proposal in 1924 but in 1929 the Labour Government set up a Committee of Inquiry which concluded that a ‘ double barrelled ’ rail tunnel could probably be built although it would be necessary to drive a pilot tunnel to demonstrate its feasibility beyond doubt .
7 Almost the biggest shock of the many I had sustained on my return home was the loss of the social cachet I had enjoyed for so many years .
8 Everything would have combined to emphasize the fact that she was no longer part of the terrain her ancestors had occupied for so many generations .
9 He had come across very few others not of the Kind , with that strength of vision .
10 Meanwhile , on the Right Bank the renewed German endeavour had met with even less success .
11 This was one U Nu , but not the deeper man , who had searched for so many years for enlightenment .
12 I repeated and repeated the twenty-third psalm , as I had done in so many kinds of danger before .
13 In the end Father landed a job that was n't too bad , working as a technical engineer for Marconi 's , whose goods he had bought for so many years .
14 Being able to say these difficult , and intensely private things to her mother before the funeral was the trigger she wanted to be able to grieve genuinely and begin to feel the loss of her mother , rather than nurse the resentment she had had for so many years .
15 And people stressing a cost factor as important were relatively likely to say they had had at least some choice between different credit arrangements , whereas people stressing convenience were relatively likely to say there had been only one possibility ( though differences were small ) .
16 A career diplomat , he had served in the Washington embassy in 1970-83 and as head of the Foreign Ministry 's United States department in 1983-86 , and had participated in nearly all Soviet-US summit and foreign ministerial meetings since 1983 .
17 Candida Gray , Candida Gray , a name that she had known for as many years as she had known any such names ; she had not read as many of the novels as she ought to have done , but she had read one at least , and that one she actually remembered .
18 She saw affection and concern in his eyes , but imagined that the love was gone , the intensity of the gaze , that knowingness that she had shared for so many years as they had fought to find this place through the forest .
19 Your colleagues had gone to so much trouble to organise the party .
20 But when he and his family got back to their cabin they seemed upset because we had gone to so much trouble . ’
21 It followed the track it had followed for so many years , awakened the parties to rage , apathy and contempt in precisely the usual places and ended , as it always did , in a drawn game .
22 For instance , on the day we moved , while the men were still lurching around with their crates and cardboard boxes , Tod slipped out into the garden-the garden on which he had worked for so many years .
23 She 'd known then who had taken it , and why Lori had left with so much friendliness .
24 Dressing for the afternoon , she wondered what Mrs Darrell was like , and whether she was worth all the tohu-bohu of preparing a slap-up tea , and being formally ‘ At Home ’ , which had resulted in even more work for McAllister , as Sally-Anne was increasingly beginning to think herself when she was being a maid of all work .
25 But she recognised him already from his photograph , although he had put on so much weight .
26 She could hardly bear to think the thought , but it did seem to her that anyone who had lived for so many years with her mother could be excused for a certain lack of joie de vivre .
27 By that time , I had listened to so many commercials , and studied their language in such detail , that I was tired of the whole subject .
28 ‘ That 's the trouble with Nicky , ’ Constance told Louise after she had returned from yet another evening that had ended with a quarrel .
29 In the time between the world had changed in so many ways .
30 He was probably sitting here now , on that grey , patchy settee that he had described with so much care .
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