Example sentences of "[vb past] him [verb] her [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 It never was when she invited him to meet her at the flat ; she was keeping him and Stock out of each other 's way .
2 Leonora whirled round , flushing as she found him watching her from the doorway .
3 I found him cursing her for the border .
4 She let him accompany her into the small lounge where the set was kept in segregation from the vocal and gregarious fishermen , and settle her in a comfortable chair , cheek by jowl with a single elderly lady , who seemed pleased to have company , and disposed to conversation .
5 It protested at once , so she let him carry her to the living-room .
6 She let him drown her in the deep water , too weak even to raise her hands to cling to him .
7 She forbade him to accompany her beyond the door and walked alone over the golden sand past the flower-beds to the gate .
8 I was impressed , then I noticed him clocking her in the mirror behind the bar .
9 However , she allowed him to squire her to the desk , without comment and with a straight face , told him the number of her key , though keys were almost an affectation at ‘ The Salmon 's Return ’ , more for ornament than use , and let him take it down for her and escort her to the foot of the oak staircase , which wound in slightly drunken lurches about a narrow well , the polished treads hollowed by centuries of use .
10 Forcing herself to assume a composure she was far from feeling , Gina allowed him to usher her from the small lobby behind the front door into a living-room of graceful proportions .
11 Miserably she allowed him to settle her in the taxi .
12 Numbly Rory allowed him to lead her to the dance floor , moving automatically into his arms as though she 'd always belonged there .
13 Rachel 's pulses thundered as she allowed him to lead her to the dance-floor beneath the flashing lights .
14 Rachel allowed him to lead her to the dance-floor , but his callous dismissal of the unfortunate Domino was symptomatic of the kind of man he was .
15 But still less did she want to make a scene or create any kind of curiosity amongst the people she had just left , so she allowed him to lead her from the room , saying , ‘ Yes , we needed to discuss those — er — charts , did n't we , Dr Russell ? ’ in case anyone was still listening .
16 She allowed him to corner her in the pantry .
17 Such a false position was not for her , nor for her was the taunt of cowardice , so she smiled and assented , and allowed him to drag her into the sparsest area of the room .
18 For two years after they married , she put up with his violent temper which once led him to throw her across the lawn and punch her , breaking bones in her hand and finger .
19 And her suppliant 's face , round and even in this twilight , thickly flushed in the hectic way that he had seen before , repulsed him and made him take her by the arm she had raised and move it like a detached limb back to her side .
20 She wrote that she was dying of a fever , and asked him to visit her for the first and last time .
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