Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] him to [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I compared him to the other gentlemen present .
2 However , I refer him to the recent report on our manufacturing performance produced by the CBI entitled ’ Competing with the World 's Best ’ .
3 I refer him to the independent Centre for Economic Policy Research , where Professor Denis Snower recently published a document saying : ’ Implementing the social charter may be expected to hurt precisely those workers it seeks to help , in addition to raising unemployment and reducing investment ’ .
4 I followed him to the cold lands of the north , and bought dogs and a sledge .
5 I took him to a nearby café .
6 I took him to the first Giants game when he was three .
7 I got him into the factory and from there we got the ambulance and … and I took him to the Royal Victoria Infirmary . ’
8 We could find no cause for this when I regressed him to an earlier period in this life and so I went on to regress him to what appeared to be a previous life .
9 ‘ Sometimes when I take him to the local toddler group and watch him playing with the other children , I think it would be great if he could just feel the sand in the sandpit between his toes and know what it 's like to get his hands all messed up with play dough or paint — the things other children take for granted . ’
10 She led him to the dismal apartment rented to her by Louis .
11 Mildred slid him carefully into her pocket and raced up the stairs to her room , where she transferred him to a small box with holes in the lid which she had prepared specially for the journey .
12 She followed him to the third floor , then along the gallery to a closed door .
13 She hustled him to the far side of the street .
14 She took him to the far aisle and showed him the salt tablets .
15 She performed her task so well that it was twenty minutes before she brought him to a thundering climax .
16 " It seems you went to see your friend Joseph Hyde first , " she said softly , very softly , " and then , having changed your clothes , you accompanied him to a public house called the Queen Victoria where you attended a secret meeting of the Irish Republican Brotherhood , of which apparently , you have been a member for some two years . "
17 She had hold of his hand , she marched him to the front door .
18 We rushed him to the veterinary hospital , where he was given an antidote which should have worked within 20 minutes .
19 We took him to a Chinese restaurant where they serve those drinks in coconuts — they 're quite strong and he does n't really drink , but we made him have one anyway , and he quite enjoyed it .
20 Many aspects of his analysis were similar to those advanced by Blauner , but they led him to an opposite conclusion .
21 And that , I I was , my hus , during the time mother was ill , my husband took ill , now this is where authorities do n't give you any back up , instead of sending him to hospital which was fifteen minutes by bus , I could have visited him every day they sent him to the other side of the county which only allowed a visit once a week , and meant I had to leave at twelve o'clock and get home at six !
22 They bound the restaurant owner , who moaned feebly and thrashed about a bit ; then with Lambert 's aid they hoisted him to the high seat .
23 He took him to a long narrow room in the cellars of the law courts , where phone-taps were carried out .
24 It introduced him to the human race .
25 It introduced him to the bizarre situation that Churches treated each other worse than they treated anyone else ; and to the recognition that the reason for this was not religious but racial .
26 He dismissed the service and told us to follow him to the back rooms for counselling .
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