Example sentences of "had [verb] [pron] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 During the six years that followed his restoration , Louis put together again the coalition of ecclesiastical and secular support that had sustained him in the 820s .
2 For instance , in an 1897 novel , The Typewriter Girl , the heroine comments on finding a job : ‘ I had justified myself before the impartial tribunal of political economy …
3 It was just this power and seriousness that had fascinated her in the first place .
4 Its windows and doors had been sealed up with breeze-blocks but the Koranic inscription beneath the roof remained and someone had painted it in the past ten years .
5 All the same , the theme is still national honour and personal loyalty , the lessons which Dick teaches to Anastasia as successfully as he had taught them to the weak but responsive Carol .
6 After the Blefuscans had arranged everything with the Lilliputian officials , they came to visit me .
7 The tempo of a summer 's day had adjusted itself to the measured progress of the tournament through the placid dunes and sandhills .
8 For almost the whole of their walk their objective had been in sight : the green copper cupola of the soaring campanile of Arthur Blomfield 's extraordinary Romanesque basilica , built in 1870 on the bank of this sluggish urban waterway with as much confidence as if he had erected it on the Venetian Grand Canal .
9 Even so , she had hidden herself in the claustrophobic cabin , afraid she might be recognized .
10 But the archaeologists ' obsession with the past had blinded them to the real cause of the lamentations they witnessed along the river .
11 Without a doubt it had been Greg 's backing which had propelled him into the big league ; without him , for all his talent , Hugo might have been trapped in small-time design and manufacture for ever .
12 They had not approved of the baby ; they had thought Phoebe negligent at best for getting pregnant and not taking appropriate action ; they had chivvied her through the later months of her pregnancy with a mixture of indulgence and irritation , cross both that she was pregnant and that she was n't taking it seriously .
13 That has since happened in England and Wales , although the Convention of Scottish Local Authorities said it had heard nothing in the past year from the Scottish Office .
14 Daphne Rye once again had pointed him in the right direction .
15 Held , dismissing the appeal , that , if there had been a contravention of section 3 of the Act of 1986 , an order could be made under section 6(2) against both the contravener and persons knowingly concerned in that contravention provided that such order was intended to restore all the parties to specific transactions to their respective former positions and that the steps ordered to be taken were reasonably capable of achieving that object ; that , on a contravention of one of the provisions of section 6(1) ( a ) , an order could be made under the subsection against persons knowingly concerned in the contravention provided that the steps ordered to be taken were reasonably capable of remedying the contravention ; that such restitutionary orders could be made notwithstanding that the persons knowingly concerned had received nothing under the impugned transactions , there being no distinction between the type of order that could be made under the subsections against a contravener and a person knowingly concerned ; and that , accordingly , the judge had been right to dismiss the solicitors ' summons to strike out the S.I.B . 's claims against them ( post , pp. 907C–D , F–G , G–H , 909D–G , G–H , 910D , 913D–G , H — 914A , 915C–D ) .
16 Miss Scrimgeour had received one at the same time .
17 Sarah told Maureen that she had received one by the same post .
18 players had received it in the past two years as well , now four times overall since it was inaugurated in 1985 .
19 Bracing the lamp with his foot , he jerked the flex out and then had to steady himself as the unstable ground beneath him shifted .
20 But she did make two purchases from the hat and the dress departments with the money which J. D. O'Conner had given her for the two articles which she had written for him .
21 Tight in his hand he held the silver coin that Dad had given him at the front door .
22 I was a war baby and a shame to my birth-dead mother who had given herself to the last-time-leave blandishments of my faceless father .
23 Yet considerate as ever , Louisa had shielded him from the worst of the intrusion .
24 The devil had booked them into the same room .
25 He had addressed it to the Chief Accountant personally , and a letter so addressed , in his distinctive handwriting would stand out a mile when the letters were spread across Steve Pyle 's desk .
26 I mean we used to do the annual report because the R C E had to provide something to the General Manager
27 What magic did these brothers possess that had catapulted them into the rarefied atmosphere of the multi-billionaires .
28 Rangers , though , deserved some fortune because they had enjoyed none at the other end .
29 Whereas Catherine the Great had confined them to the western and southern borderlands of the empire and Alexander I had encouraged them to consider economic diversification and cultural assimilation , Nicholas intervened in their lives more dramatically .
30 He had seemed certain to become the first black Tory MP , representing Cheltenham — Norman Tebbit had tipped him as the first black cabinet minister and there 'd even been the odd hint that he might one day inhabit No 10 .
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