Example sentences of "[adv] [conj] he be [verb] to " in BNC.

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1 At the US Open at Shinnecock Hills he played the best I 'd ever seen him play — probably even better than he was going to in the British Open .
2 Oh I mean many of them were taken out of a book which had in the front price five and sixpence so a so I think that went very well and er I mean Jack was much encouraged by it so much so that he 's going to actually offer to do it for another organisation that he 's connected with
3 It is also vital that any incident or accident involving the emergency services ( police , fire or ambulance ) is notified to Peter Bateman at Felcourt as soon as possible so that he is briefed to dal with consequent media enquiries .
4 You may need to help the patient at work , especially if he is returning to his own business .
5 Captain Geoff is the overall co-ordinator er not only for the procurement , er missile procurement of the B-Seventeen , but he 's put the foundation together and he 's going to be a curator of the museum .
6 As Professor Verlinden has shown , the negro slave was much in evidence at the end of the Middle Ages in Portugal and Spain long before he was exported to the Americas .
7 After two years , he was judged to have learnt sufficient skills , and was apprenticed to a Plymouth shoe maker who treated him so harshly and badly that he was re-admitted to the workhouse where he stayed until he was 19 years old .
8 With his loyal advisers Francis Cripps and Frances Morrell by his side , he beavers away with unremitting zeal even when his beloved industrial policy is snatched away and he is banished to the Department of Energy .
9 The passive is certainly more impersonal and factual than the active construction but nevertheless one feels that an analysis such as that of Palmer and Higgenbotham , which equates He was seen to walk away and He was seen to be walking away as both having the reporting " see that " meaning , loses sight of a slight but real semantic distinction .
10 But Crosby wo n't see them in reserve team action tonight because he 's set to be away on scouting business .
11 Paul 's touching letters stood out and they met for the first time shortly before he was posted to the former Yugoslavia .
12 For reasons beyond his control , the new tsar found himself at war with Persia just as he was coming to terms with the Turks .
13 Just as he was returning to his seat , Charles met Malcolm Harris rushing up the aisle .
14 ‘ I know , I know , just when he was beginning to be a success like Perry .
15 According to his own account , as soon as he was brought to Rome as a hostage in 167 B.C. he became a friend of the two surviving sons of Aemilius Paulus by sharing some books with them .
16 Nasogastric feeding exacerbated matters but his symptoms settled as soon as he was changed to a modular feed .
17 She turned her head , staring at him , noting how he looked down rather than meet her eyes , and knew at once that he was lying to her .
18 ‘ Luckily an ambulance arrived quickly and he was rushed to hospital . ’
19 For the Ulster Unionist celebrated his 54th birthday yesterday as he was elected to Belfast City Council for the seventh time .
20 The general principle contemplates a model of a patient of an age recognized as endowing him with the competence to exercise a valid choice , and who is lucid in the sense not only that he regards himself as being in control of his mental faculties , but also that he is recognized to be so by others .
21 a manager might have to change his leadership style as the circumstances of his job change ( eg. when he is moved to a new job ) .
22 He 's still probably sweating a little because he 's waiting to be called off at the next motorway junction .
23 He searched through the desk for various necessary documents that the bureaucratic world would demand to see now that he was returning to it , and took them to the suitcase in the bedroom , together with his agent 's letter .
24 Now that he was going to be with Sims for most of the day , knowing what was on the photographs was an uncomfortable burden .
25 Now that he was committed to a course of action he felt exhilarated .
26 Perhaps he heard today that he 's going to be evicted , his mother 's sick , his kid 's been thrown out of school .
27 Ian McConnell , a 19-years-old striker , formerly with Dundee , arrived in Derry today and he 's expected to be part of the panel which takes the field against Dundalk tomorrow afternoon .
28 Ian McConnell , a 19-year old striker , formerly with Dundee , arrived in Derry today and he 's expected to be part of the panel which takes the field against Dundalk tomorrow afternoon .
29 " He is , Ma'am ; I passed him a moment ago and he was talking to Mr Churchill . "
30 Certainly this limpidity is not within Eliot 's reach even when he is trying to be limpid , as in ‘ Ash-Wednesday ’ ; , and of course the experience of a simple person enduring a commonplace and unavoidable sorrow — is such as Eliot could never manage , early or late .
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