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To be fond of smth / smb / doing smthDate: 2015-10-07; view: 566. 1. I'm not overly fond of cooking. 2. I'd grown fond of the place and it was difficult to leave. 3. My grandfather was very fond of handing out advice to all my friends. 4. But mostly this is a love story, and Andersen is clearly fond of his subjects. 5. He was very fond of her but it strained imagination to see how she could fit into a policeman's life. 6. I became fond of his face. 7. She was much too fond of Heathcliff, and the worst punishment we could invent was to keep her separate from him. 8. All this results in a rare phenomenon: Marks and Spencer is a company people are fond of. 9. Commentators are fond of discovering and praising a guidebook clarity in the novel. 10. First, he knew Lewie was fond of him, and Lewie was the boss. 11. I am fond of him, he has been unfailingly kind to me. 12. Like Dad, he was fond of whisky. 13. She was fond of, she liked, probably she loved, Wharton Horricker. 14. There was a desk I was fond of, it's true. 15. "The only reason I make money is so I can give it away," Quigley is fond of saying. 16. Sue's very fond of hiking and backpacking. 17. Dad was fond of whisky, but normally only drank on an evening when work was done. 18. He travelled extensively, was fond of music, and was a competent pianist. 19. I haven't seen Ed for a while, but I'm very fond of him. 20. Rob was her rapt audience, especially fond of her Hamlet. 21. He is not especially fond of killing animals but, as a countryman, he sees culling deer as a necessity. 22. I was especially fond of the chocolate biscuits decorated with crystallised violets.
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