Example sentences of "[pron] [prep] himself [verb] " in BNC.

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1 He introduced the Bill on 4th March , 1859 ; it was given a Second Reading on 18th March and passed to a Select Committee which besides himself included Hall and Stirling .
2 Now the followers of the cult identify with a son-god like Adonis , Attis or Osiris — not to mention Christ — who in himself comprises both the fixated worshipper of the mother ( Madonna and Child ) and the punished mother herself ( pietà ) .
3 He could indeed hear breathing , though it was true of course that it might be his own , since everything about himself seemed to be happening so far away for the moment .
4 After countless such visits he was afraid to look into the bowl in case something of himself had been lost in his body 's writhing struggles to empty itself .
5 Byron was a " touring tragedian " whose preoccupation with his own performance made everything outside himself seem unreal , an actor " who devoted immense trouble to becoming a role that he adopted " .
6 The night outside was drizzling with rain , and everyone except himself hurried for a cab ; the flower-sellers were disconsolate .
7 Everything David had shown her of himself had made her love him and yet she believed that he had done something unspeakable .
8 Naturally , Mozart wrote it for himself to play .
9 And , since Rachmaninov wrote it for himself to play , it demands a tremendous technique from the soloist .
10 Not noted for his ability in the air , Gascoigne sensed the kill and found it in himself to jump high , evade the challenge of tall defender Silvano Bendetti and meet the ball with power and precision , guiding it emphatically past goalkeeper Giuseppe Zinetti .
11 Pius took it upon himself to proclaim the Dogma of the Assumption .
12 Sir Herbert Morgan took it upon himself to act as chairman of an unofficial committee to help realise the three-year project .
13 He did n't dare take it upon himself to enlighten her further .
14 I 'm not saying that 's right , but he took it upon himself to say ‘ You 're not taking liberties with any of our lads . ’
15 So taken by the Cardus pictures in words , Simon took it upon himself to visit the famous school and ‘ the most beautiful playing fields in the world . ’
16 So taken by the Cardus pictures in words , Simon took it upon himself to visit the famous school and ‘ the most beautiful playing fields in the world . ’
17 After Alaric 's death , Theodoric took it upon himself to defend the Visigoths , and to punish their attackers .
18 The scheme , called simply Bank a Ball , was the brainchild of Hewitt himself , who , having been advised of this long standing need by the International Tennis Federation 's ( ITF ) Director of Development , Doug Macurdy back in October 1991 , took it upon himself to create and develop a plan to overcome the problem .
19 That a mere colonel in the White House would have taken it upon himself to engage in such duplicitous and totally illegal operations without the president 's knowledge and authority is quite impossible to believe .
20 Donald , who describes himself as a Friend of the Earth , does not himself hold a driving licence , but has taken it upon himself to publish a list of prominent men and women who have had the misfortune to be caught driving over the limit a judge , a chief superintendent , various footballers , actors , television personalities — in what he chooses to call his Hall of Shame : It is the number of celebrities we have discovered that is so shocking .
21 The restorers ' single most valuable resource came in the form of life-size archive photographs of all the Gibbons ' carving at Hampton Court , and David Esterly is the first to admit his debt to the unnamed civil servant who in 1939 seeing war clouds gather , prudently took it upon himself to record the work for future generations .
22 He took it upon himself to promote the idea of having a noble building for an Institute in Glasgow , and in this he was ably supported by brothers James and Edwin Docharty , sons of a famous Scottish painter , and a number of other deaf people of exceptional ability .
23 For two months , while the fighting swayed back and forth overseas , Bishop Hrolf , released by the same storms from sentinel duty in the islands , took it upon himself to oversee the defences of the more vulnerable parts of the mainland .
24 Undaunted , one of the Marines took it upon himself to pop out from hiding just long enough to hurl a grenade at the gun position .
25 Zoser , as rigid as Andrus and far less intelligent , had taken it upon himself to put right the wrong which had been done to his friend and his church .
26 While the withdrawal of Peter Elliott and Tom McKean weakened the European Relays competition held in tandem with a field event international match between Britain , Italy and Hungary , the Tynesider took it upon himself to elevate the proceedings with the kind of form that suggests he could challenge for an Olympic triple jump medal in Barcelona in two months ' time .
27 Without my knowledge or authorisation , Reg took it upon himself to hand the Press a list of star names I was proposing to bring to the club .
28 Anyone in West Africa who takes it upon himself to tether an animal or restrict its movement , must pay regard to the possibility of an attack by one of these armies .
29 Despite his appearance , the erstwhile executioner treated the princes with a rough kindliness that set him apart from the other attendants — taking it upon himself to ensure that the food was to their liking and the fire well-tended .
30 If rape is defined as ‘ carnal knowledge of a woman without her consent ’ , then it makes nonsense of the proposition that the jury is the trier of fact if the judge takes it upon himself to tell the jury what is or is not consent .
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