Example sentences of "[vb past] [coord] a [noun] " in BNC.

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No Sentence
1 Criminal proceedings do not become active ’ until a suspect has either been arrested , or charged or a warrant issued .
2 It is envisaged that these arrangements shall remain in force until initial expressions of interest have been received and analysed and a decision taken regarding the handling of the next stage of the formal sale process .
3 He shouted and an orderly came in .
4 A train hooted and a moment later flashed past with a shriek .
5 Then it moved and a man stepped out in front of her .
6 She said she and another officer had been pursuing a red Ford Sierra car on the road between the villages of Hillam and Burton , North Yorkshire , when it suddenly stopped and a gunman got out .
7 Jenny 's lashes flickered and a smile touched her coral mouth .
8 Des said they had to climb sheer cliffs with their faces blacked and a knife between their teeth .
9 Behind them a dog howled and a door opened and shut .
10 Then the seas settled a little , and a boat came , carrying a crew he recognised and a Skyeman he knew well , but who would not meet his eye .
11 ‘ That director chap came and a couple of the actors … the leading ones . ’
12 A YEAR CAME AND a year went and another began to tick its way into the clock of time .
13 There was movement in the cage from where the old female 's voice came and a shadow came out on the floor of her cage , thin and gaunt , the silhouette of an eagle .
14 His fury when the doorbell jangled and a family of tourists in shorts and visors came babbling in .
15 The back screen door slammed and a second later her son Hank padded silently into the kitchen .
16 Portsmouth soon equalised and a stalemate followed in the second half , although Alton had some good chances .
17 ‘ One firework somehow went wrong and exploded and a fragment hit the baby .
18 The Basildon result seemed but a straw to clutch at .
19 We met and a plan was conceived : Pete and Dick would get the next round in , then organise the logistics of food , route and transport .
20 Lloyd beamed and a couple of the Dennison brothers laughed dutifully at the in-joke which went over me .
21 The other woman , as if torn between a friend whose authority she respected and a husband whom she loved , explained with melancholy , ‘ What can I do , that 's how he is !
22 1–4 Malcolm MacKinnon , an old man , was lost in a storm between Bridgend and Mulindry where he lived and a week later had not been found .
23 A ground-floor display sets the scene , with an AV show on The Way They Lived and an invitation to Meet Our Edwardians .
24 The sobs lessened and a hand was extended , into which he pressed the tissue .
25 New merchant and professional classes arose and a proletariat developed out of the peasantry .
26 He turned and a figure appeared from behind the shed .
27 The officers withdrew and an attempt was made to resolve the problem with the mediation of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and aid workers in the camp .
28 The door shook and a scream of pure fear , like a trapped animal , rang from the study .
29 Mr Chambers said shortly afterwards a police officer arrived and a van pulled up with six men inside .
30 He walked through the white corridors , past the notice boards with their offers of small rooms and old cars , past the coffee bar where people sat at tables , past a hole in the white floor where an old chair stood sentry over an opened conduit in which a torch shone and a man crawled , and as he left he looked at his watch :
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