Example sentences of "with [pron] he " in BNC.

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1 Talking about him with the others , I did find out that several other people had had the same experience with him as me ; that his lovemaking was done in silence , that he never said a word ( in fact with me he hardly looked me in the eye either , just stared at his own hands as he moved them over my body , not stroking so much as seizing and kneading me , holding me down too ) ; but then later in the night you would wake to hear him talking to himself , lying there fast asleep ( O always asked the men he fucked to stay with him all night long , always ) , fast asleep and talking out loud in the night , talking in a fast , furious , hushed , hollow voice .
2 ‘ After a few days with me he starts to calm down and see things in perspective again , ’ she reveals .
3 With me he 's a good boy , ’ she said .
4 When he first came to live with me he showed some envy of his young brother Graham 's success as a soprano in the local eisteddfodau , the Welsh competitive festivals .
5 I remember a little boy , I 've got on a picture with me he was a very very poor child and he made the best gloves in the class and it was a real sort of accolade for him .
6 The next time out with me he broke down and cried for Constance .
7 And I said , and what 's up with me he said ?
8 he 's still in love with me he says , in eh , working in Birmingham , living in Bristol .
9 Jonathan Miller has chosen 15 interlocutors and with them he debates a range of psychological and allied issues .
10 In 1970 he helped to found the British wing of Friends of the Earth ; with them he was instrumental in giving a hefty nudge to the rickety barrow of the British nuclear establishment .
11 Keble as a young man enthusiastically planned to edit his works , though on closer acquaintance with them he renounced the project .
12 He took slightly more interest in his two sons , Arthur and Alan , but not through any natural preference for them ; it was simply that with them he knew better what questions should be asked .
13 With them he can reprogram the Conscience to overcome the Voord 's immunisation , and re-establish peace on Marinus .
14 Here and now he was with them and while with them he would enjoy .
15 Together with them he established the musical pre-eminence of Venice in composition and performance , as Petrucci had done half a century earlier in publishing .
16 And , as in business he knew no way of earning by his own labour , so in his relationship with them he knew no means of restoring himself by his own effort .
17 What had happened to the two other bearers who had started out with them he did not know .
18 Thankfully one of the other people in the flat was from keighley and a fellow whites fan ( had trials with them he kept telling me , and scored against Lukic — a fact he celebrated by naming his cat after the illustrious man ) so they press cuttings did n't last too long .
19 He came in when Sophie was giving her booster injection to her client 's dog , and as soon as she had finished with them he confronted her .
20 He once confronted three baiters but after an ugly scene with them he advises people not to do the same .
21 She had to go and she had to go and live with them he could n't get married without .
22 Luckily , he had a correspondent in his brother Theo in whom he could confide and with whom he could explore ideas about art ; the letters are thus an invaluable source of interpretation .
23 Then there is the tale of a lying girl , as she may be , with whom he makes love , and who alarms him with word of a threatening German — a former SS man , perhaps .
24 A Disaffection is a problematical book — because of this closeness : we learn very little about how Doyle is seen by companions , very little about the standpoint of those who surround him , those with whom he has his tender and abrasive dealings , with whom he airs his invectives and bitter ironies , with whom he conducts his antagonisms and ingratiations .
25 A Disaffection is a problematical book — because of this closeness : we learn very little about how Doyle is seen by companions , very little about the standpoint of those who surround him , those with whom he has his tender and abrasive dealings , with whom he airs his invectives and bitter ironies , with whom he conducts his antagonisms and ingratiations .
26 A Disaffection is a problematical book — because of this closeness : we learn very little about how Doyle is seen by companions , very little about the standpoint of those who surround him , those with whom he has his tender and abrasive dealings , with whom he airs his invectives and bitter ironies , with whom he conducts his antagonisms and ingratiations .
27 To that extent it is a harsh existence , quite unlike that of the artists , musicians and writers with whom he normally mixes .
28 Indeed he was apt to take violent prejudices against certain men and women in public life with whom he was not personally acquainted .
29 This personal stamp is partly created by the unique range of Burrows ’ influences — British folk dance from his training at the Royal Ballet School , ballet itself , and at the opposite extreme the minimal , unburnished style of Rosemary Butcher , with whom he has performed several times .
30 Despite his busy schedule , he made time to visit the conference ‘ Geordie night ’ — a gathering of north eastern MPs and activists — and was to be found one evening at the Brighton Trade Union and Labour Club with his friend Michael Elliot , a political comedian with whom he toured the coalfields during the 1984-85 pits strike .
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