Example sentences of "[prep] [noun pl] and he " in BNC.

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1 Steve Chapman says they run courses for beginners and he would advise youngsters to learn properly … they can go on and progress or just stay at whatever level they want … a lot depends on budget …
2 But she did not forget ‘ sitting on me grandad 's rocking chair combing his hair and I can always remember him sat there and me stood up behind him : I 'd comb his hair for hours and he just sat there and let me . ’
3 Charles II found land grants very convenient ; he could give them to people who at the beginning of the century would have asked for monopolies and he could feel confident that these grants would not rouse the hostility in England that monopolies had caused .
4 He goes right thought for ages and he thought right what do I really need ?
5 Anyway Kerslake played for Spurs and he played shit .
6 ‘ I used to take this lad for walks and he was forever saying ‘ Beckus my old grey mare ’ .
7 He was my room-mate in the days when your school was used as a sort of summer camp for magicians and he actually did disappear one day and we all thought he must have gone home .
8 She had talked about thresholds and he had given an authoritative paper on ‘ The Potent Castrato : the phallogocentric structuration of Balzac 's hermaphrodite hero/ines ’ .
9 A Mr yesterday , he was just authorising the use of firearms and he said that was put into writing and we 've got that form but that only authorises the issue of firearms er the practicality , the authorising and the carrying out of the raid is n't covered by that document .
10 Fleischmann has had some excellent ideas including methods to measure the surface diffraction of X-rays and he has made a detailed study of electrolysis in solutions that do not conduct electricity .
11 He 's called the house a couple of times and he says he 's coming this way .
12 Brian is , because we 've been out a couple of times and he does , I mean if we go out he 'll smoke then and then he just normally stops .
13 He has bought himself a couple of Hunters and he plans to do some show jumping of all things .
14 Or I could open some tins of potatoes and he 'll fry them with corned beef and beans .
15 At this time , Miller told Blair that he had been working with Nathanael St André , ‘ the famous anatomist ’ , examining structures of plants and he believed that together they would make some curious discoveries .
16 The next letter from Miller , dated 2 February 1756 , acknowledged three from Bartram and two boxes of plants and he added ‘ To the first of your letters , I returned an answer in September last , but for fear it may miscarry , I beg leave to repeat the substance of that here . ’
17 I knew the Führer would forget it within a matter of days and he did , only Himmler did n't .
18 Most patients reacted to injections of a number of substances and he made them up custom made ‘ vaccines ’ of supposed antidotes .
19 His home has been attacked by animal rights activists in the past but now his farm is in the hands of managers and he says he 's paid his price .
20 Well tha , that was very rude to come fucking , a lot of things and he just say
21 The prelude to this was set by another psychoanalyst called Otto Rank one of Freud 's er early followers who had published a book called the Myth of the Birth of the Hero and in this book what Rank did was to trawl through world folklore and literature , from myths of heroes , and of course there are a lot of those books , and dozens and dozens of them and what he does in the book is he distils all these dozens and dozens of myths and he finds that there 's a common pattern emerges and it 's , it 's pretty stereotypical actually and the common pattern is the hero is born of royal or divine parents , the hero for some reason or other that loses his parents or is cast out by them or is er exposed in some way , erm the hero is often threatened by some outside force and then rescued by er humble people .
22 Terribly fast , it was er , er , over his left shoulder going down there like a rate of knots and he 's now telling the other slips , putting his left hand showing where it might have gone .
23 Er , he was a lecturer , and er er a couple of fags and he was a couple of cigarettes and he was he wa he wa he was er quite well quite well er r rewarded .
24 If you notice , when he speaks he tends to run words together towards the end of sentences and he does the same when he writes . ’
25 cos I thought what you talk about is such a load of bollocks and he looked at me madly , and I thought oh how funny , I thought .
26 Mr Harwood constructs a neat cat 's cradle of ironies and he keeps you guessing until almost the last minute about how the fraternal conflict is going to resolve itself .
27 and like they run down the stairs and run back up the stairs , yeah , and they 're looking out the window out the window and they go why the bloody hell are you always just looking out of windows and he 's going do it your way and I 'll do it mine .
28 We gave [ the library manager ] an enormous list of requirements and he has met most of them … and I think we 've got to be reasonably satisfied because the rest of the school have got to have their whack as well .
29 A tram driver hid him under a seat in return for two packets of cigarettes and he escaped from the Austrian Soviet zone .
30 Er , he was a lecturer , and er er a couple of fags and he was a couple of cigarettes and he was he wa he wa he was er quite well quite well er r rewarded .
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