Example sentences of "[vb past] [verb] [pron] for [verb] " in BNC.

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1 It would be a long time before he stopped despising himself for having succumbed to a purely physical attraction , and that towards a woman he despised .
2 Because that was when I stopped taking it for granted .
3 My cherished Höfner acoustic guitar recently tried to murder me for leaving it in the boot of the car on a hot sunny day .
4 Imagine , she 'd thanked him for telling her Rob was missing !
5 As for his own comeback to the official international cricket scene , Gatting admitted : ‘ I 'd taken nothing for granted .
6 Ruth instinctively clasped Fand 's hand again ; she 'd taken it for granted the half-mortals would be hostile to one of Fincara 's Women .
7 He seemed to take it for granted that she was the one to talk to .
8 To her horror , Folly saw Luke nod and turn away down the corridor , leaving her alone with this sinister whispering woman who seemed to take it for granted that she was meekly going to strip off and join in what could only be some kind of orgy .
9 He seemed to take it for granted that everyone would do what he told them .
10 Despite the darkness and unannounced approach , the raiding party found the Armstrong chiefs , Mangerton , Gilnockie , Whithaugh and the rest , awaiting their arrival at Langholm , their ‘ capital ’ , with some hundreds of their very tough riders assembled , a significant indication of their excellent information system in this wild Border country ; and when they heard of the descent on Dacre 's castle of Gilsland , they appeared to take it for granted that they would go along .
11 They had given their only child the benefit of the doubt , but Paige had known , and Lori had hated her for knowing — and for not telling tales .
12 The local people had stoned her for wearing trousers in the street and Fernando had ruefully added how things had changed since then — now anything went in Majorca .
13 Unused as I am to public scribbling , and tardy to boot ( I 've just read your December/January issue ) , I felt I had to thank you for saving me time and trouble ( not to mention hard-won shekels ) , in a search for something which obviously does not exist .
14 She hurried on to Horsfall Woods , stopping only at a sweetshop to buy a raspberry lollipop with the threepence Rosalind had given her for taking the letter .
15 She had rebuked him for drinking a bit too much beforehand .
16 He cited a Daily Mail article , rather curiously signed Editor , which had attacked him for presiding over the disappearance of ‘ an immense fortune ’ left hint by his father , and had concluded : ‘ It is difficult to see how the leader of a party who has lost his own fortune can hope to restore those of anyone else , or his country .
17 People , my real friends , had respected me for coping so well after my mother 's death and for putting up with my financial situation at home .
18 I remember it was he himself who put it most aptly one day when mother had scolded him for commencing work at home on a customer 's suit .
19 For most of the leaders among the Owenites the distinction only showed itself in their recognition that the Bill had done nothing for working people ; that since the prime need , as they saw it , was to act directly to remove the evils of a system which grievously oppressed the lives of working people , the Bill had been at best an irrelevance , at worst a distraction .
20 A policeman had suspected them for loitering about , they would n't give a reasonable explanation or account of themselves .
21 What was this very special place that only a few hours ago I had cursed myself for entering ?
22 His cool irony brought swift colour to her cheeks as she recalled how furiously she had condemned him for doing just that .
23 Atherton batted beautifully for 42 but then left kicking himself for slamming a wide ball from Reiffel straight to cover off the back foot .
24 10 And after he had seen the vision , immediately we endeavoured to go into Macedonia , assuredly " gathering that the Lord had called us for to preach the gospel unto them .
25 Samson had clouted her for burning it — the beginning of a long bad day .
26 The bell for Compline rang , the time she had set herself for hounding him out at the wicket , into a world he was , perhaps , already beginning to regret surrendering , but which he might have found none too hospitable to a runaway Benedictine novice .
27 Mr Anderson told the tribunal he could not apply for bad debt relief until 12 months after the debt had arisen while Customs had penalised him for paying the VAT ‘ a mere 16 days late . ’
28 Richard Baxter , during the one time he was asked to preach before Oliver Cromwell , had criticised him for weakening the Church by encouraging divisions .
29 ‘ Mama — ’ Gratitude rushed up in him ; he realised that he had not always considered her , had taken her for granted , had consulted her in nothing ; and now she had probably saved his reason .
30 He had taken it for granted that his verbose and glib explanation of the facts would convince the jury of his innocence .
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