Example sentences of "he [verb] [pers pn] [adv] [prep] [art] " in BNC.
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1 | Somehow , he made it through to the end . |
2 | Throwing back its bearskin cover , he lowered her carefully to the mattress and stood looking down at her . |
3 | He hated them before the war and he hates them now with a depth you gentlemen here would find hard to understand . ’ |
4 | But he laid her down on the horsehair sofa , and said Mrs Patten would not be in yet , and there was time ; and time there was , and what had happened last night was repeated , once and then again , until she , flushed and dishevelled , pulled down her dress , and said ‘ She is coming . |
5 | Well away from the beaten track he laid her gently on a bed of moss and bracken , and she opened her arms to him , loath to lose his touch for even a second . |
6 | The light from the hall spilled across the multi-coloured counterpane , and he laid her gently in the middle . |
7 | Counting out seven pound notes , he laid them carefully on the table . |
8 | He laid them out on the desk , got a plastic bag out of the bottom drawer of the filing cabinet and swept all the bits and pieces into it . |
9 | He laid it down on a rock and plunged his arm in the sack once more . |
10 | There he stabbed him repeatedly on the head , body and neck . |
11 | When my hon. Friend meets the chairman of the East Cumbria authority , will he congratulate him warmly on the fact that having , since 1982-83 , secured a budget increase , after inflation , of almost 15 per cent . |
12 | He pinned her down at the CI5 computer centre , and over the phone briefly explained what he and Doyle needed of her . |
13 | He pecked her lightly on the cheek . |
14 | Although Mr Smith welcomed the ‘ considerable potential ’ of the register , he ruled it out as an alternative to removing the unions ' constitutional influence outright . |
15 | He passed her by without a glance , but she could feel the cold waves of antipathy issuing from him , and shivered . |
16 | He passed it on to the others at their dinner time meeting . |
17 | So he sold it on to a this kid and it was up Baxters |
18 | He lines it up on the shiny sideboard . |
19 | The grocer , a hard-faced ex-soldier whose right hand lacked a thumb ( Melanie wondered , had he lopped it off on the bacon-slicer ? |
20 | But beneath it she understood , accepted , found it far easier to hate him , when he fought her back to the bed , than to ignore him ; the bitings and scratchings of anger coming near enough to passion so that when he entered her again she found it possible , in her loathing , her detestation , her bitter resentment , to wrap her own strong , hard limbs about him in a grip designed to wound and crush him but which could also excite . |
21 | he sleeps it off across the back seat |
22 | She drew herself up , stilling her racing pulses , as he asked her now with a wave at the drinks table , ‘ Would you care to indulge in a drink before dinner ? ’ |
23 | And then he asked me out in the end . |
24 | ‘ It is true , ’ Dubois continued ‘ He asked me in as an advisor , and I realized at once that they were not the work of the Bizango . ’ |
25 | " He asked you in for a drink without asking me ? " |
26 | Apparently Richard thought so , too , for after a moment he led her away to the bar . |
27 | When he led her away down the back steps the Tibetan followed and so did most of the crowd . |
28 | He nodded , and reaching out for her hand , he led her through into the sitting-room and sat down with her on the settee opposite the picture . |
29 | He led her up to the bedrooms , the floors and stairs wooden , fans whirring overhead in the steamy heat , mosquito netting over every door and window . |
30 | Still gripping her wrist , he led her over to the French windows . |