Example sentences of "[art] [noun] [conj] [vb base] him [prep] " in BNC.

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1 He eventually let go of me and I had to go the bottom of the baths and bring him to the surface , take him to the side and get him breathing again , and I was considered a failure for that .
2 A crowd of eager customers would be awaiting his arrival outside the shops and attack him for the particular colour , size or style of dress they had been waiting for .
3 Ensure that the initiating member is kept informed of the progress of the engagement and copy him on all relevant correspondence .
4 Twice , when Meredith ordered ‘ Two steps stage left ’ and Geoffrey moved to the right , Meredith came bounding down the centre aisle shouting ‘ Left , left , ducky ’ and leapt onto the apron to seize him by the shoulders and shove him into place .
5 Then when he stops , get out the car and grab him by the neck then throw then I .
6 So you sit down with The Hook and ask him about what it was like in the '60s in London , when he was lionised by Van Morrison , The Animals , Peter Green and all the gut-bucket R&B bands , but he just laughs and says it was fun .
7 Under s95(4) a police constable can be authorised to take charge of the child and bring him to court and to enter and search any named premises if he has reasonable cause to believe that the child may be found there ( s95(4) ) .
8 When making a care order it can also make a contact order under s34. ( a ) Care orders A care order places a child in the care of a designated local authority which must then receive the child and keep him in care while the order remains in force ( s33(1) ) .
9 ‘ Which girl is bad ? ’ asked Nour , his hair dark gold from the wetting of the shower , and I felt I would rather swim in the pool with the crocodiles than tell him about the girl like a cat .
10 There was never any need for her to take the initiative or inveigle him into bed .
11 His cheerful London accent seemed to bring her back down to earth , and she hurried to unlock the bolts and let him into the hallway .
12 " I 'd like to write to the marquis and thank him for what he did for me .
13 A volunteer normally offers to spend two or three hours per week as a companion to a former patient and may go out with the person or help him with specific tasks .
14 He felt a second shot hit him in the back and knock him off his feet .
15 He had pleaded with his mother not to make him go to school , but she had insisted , saying that she would pick him up at the end of the day and take him to the hospital , and that he was to ‘ keep busy ’ .
16 It 's your job to evaluate the stuff and keep him on the ball .
17 Or she might drown him in the bath or push him under a train .
18 He delivered a ringing First Amendment call to arms , enjoining the assembled audience of about 2,000 people to step forward from the sidelines and join him on the battlefield to protect the artist 's right to express himself as he wishes , unhindered by the tastes or intrusions of the government .
19 Erm I mean I 'm concerned again through his eyesight that i were we to put him as the assistant and put him on a machine , that he might just put his hand somewhere and get his hand bloody trapped or whatever with his eyesight .
20 Find an adult with authority in the district and bring him to me — ’
21 It introduces a wonderful idea , that strangers from afar find the Christ and discover him to be the Saviour of the world .
22 He had taken the trouble to seek out the young man in the morning and tease him into conversation — as he thought subtly , but Harrison was immediately aware that he was being sized up .
23 The perspective of the poem follows its language , tumbling suddenly into a burst of passion and emotion as the poet struggles to observe the forces that buffet him in the heart of his mind .
24 Sometimes he 's so determined he 's not going to go that we have to forcibly put him out of the door and get him into the car and get him there somehow .
25 Rory was late for their appointment , and when he arrived , Holdfast told him dourly to close the door and join him at the biggest table .
26 Then when he 'd softened him up he would take him up to the sale and introduce him to the dealer he was touting for — on commission , of course .
27 On an incline , all the pots and canisters and the huge stew cauldron would slide down the wagon and crowd him into a corner .
28 On behalf of you all I welcome Bishop Crowley to the North and assure him of our prayers and loyal support in the years ahead .
29 On behalf of you all I welcome Bishop Crowley to the North and assure him of our prayers and loyal support in the years ahead .
30 But Althusser elaborates it a little , using the example of Christianity , where religious practice is said to ‘ hail ’ the individual and provide him with his status as a subject .
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