Example sentences of "he had [be] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 And if the only deep emotion she had ever seen in him had been on the day of Ben Braithwaite 's engagement to Magda Tannenbaum , then she felt no right and no reason to be astonished at that .
2 Since Christmas day her feelings for him had been in such a chaotic state she did n't know whether she loved or hated him .
3 The current , soon to retire , director of the Association , who came with me to meet him had been in London for a meeting of the environmental advisory group for and so he was having a taxi to Kings Cross which I jumped into too and got dropped off at Goodge Street , right outside the door of my next ( Industrial Editors ) meeting with just a few minutes to spare , so that went more smoothly than one might have ever dreamt or hoped for .
4 This was the first time that he had been past the big covered back porch of her house , and everything was new and interesting .
5 He had been through school and university , he had travelled the world , he had completed five years in the armed forces , he had flown fighter planes and helicopters — and for nine months had had command of a mine hunter in the North Sea .
6 He had been through hell in the course of duty ; he had made sacrifices that would be asked of no other human being .
7 Moved by her obvious concern , he had written to explain that he had been through a bad time , but was better now .
8 It was said in his defence that he had been through a tough war as an Infantry NCO and the award of the Military Medal was proof of his bravery .
9 At the end of that time , working ceaselessly , he had been through every file in every office .
10 By the time he had been through that and was ready to return , Jennifer had been married and divorced and was almost a stranger again .
11 The uncle of 12-year-old Adele Thompson — killed by a joyrider in Toxteth , Liverpool — hit out : ‘ He would n't have said it if he had been through the heartache we have suffered . ’
12 He had been through it before and had already told the Captain he was sure that was the car , though he had n't looked at the driver and front passenger , having been distracted by the map and by watching the traffic coming from all three directions because he wanted to cross over .
13 By mid-morning he had been through the day 's edition of the Herald Tribune .
14 He had been through the same mill a couple of years before .
15 He had been through college , and yet , he reflected , he was still ignorant of the continent to the north .
16 Knowing what he had been through just added a new dimension to what I saw .
17 He had been through the Night of Power .
18 We started the gradual process of bringing him back into work , hoping that he had been through all his disasters in one go : first he cut himself and had to be stitched , and then he got kicked on the hock .
19 Nobody was quite sure how many degrees he had started and not finished , not even Boris , but he had been at the place so long he could remember when they used to spell it Freshmen 's Fair .
20 He could not afford to make mistakes ; all his life he had been at pains to learn and understand how ordinary people live and had delved into the seamier side of human nature , but he was still very unworldly .
21 Before that he had been at Lewis School , Pengam , when Neil Kinnock was house prefect .
22 Before that he had been at Lewis School , Pengam , when Neil Kinnock was house prefect .
23 McLeish , warmed by the fact that she had taken the trouble to find out a bit about him , confirmed he had been at Reading University and had worked as a young sergeant in the Flying Squad .
24 He had been at this cure for a mere four years but his reputation was growing fast .
25 When my cousin , who was to be in the locality ( one did not ask why at that time , and it was only after we were both freed of our vows of secrecy more than thirty years later that he told me he had been at Bletchley Park itself ) suggested coming to visit me , Mrs Sugden had no doubt but that this was my ‘ gentleman friend ’ .
26 The majority of the day he had been at Ascot Races .
27 He fervently denied that he had been at the scene of the murders or had been in any way involved .
28 He had been at school almost six months , the most miserable time of his entire life .
29 John was not universally popular with his new colleagues any more than he had been at the Wells ; his ambition aroused suspicion , scorn , envy or fear in some , and his sense of fun ( including a rather observant line in mimicry ) left barbs in some of its victims .
30 Tom Poole , who had nursed his father devotedly at the end , was in low spirits , but was as instantly captivated by his visitor as he had been at their first meeting .
  Next page