Example sentences of "[pers pn] and [pron] he " in BNC.

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1 But his hand was up , silencing me and what he must have guessed were to be my thanks .
2 When it 's just me and him he plays his favourite where he lived .
3 Er the next bed to me and he he were trying to talk to me and I er he and he wanted one of my buttons of my tunic .
4 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 .
5 And Stuart sat down in , because they got these wooden old chairs , have n't they with arms on them and he he sat there like this with his arm and went , I said Stuart whatever 's that on your arm ?
6 He has strong , agile and indeed superb hands ; in the palm of his raised , right hand he holds out to you a miniature city , complete with dome , bridges and towers , the freedom of which he is offering you and which he has promised to protect .
7 Now my colleague John spoke with you and he he outlined as much as he possibly can on the on the space on the telephone .
8 What Gromyko had said to him and what he had said to Shevardnadze .
9 She had planned now to tell him that he was the one who was thick ; that he had fallen into her trap ; that she , Gazzer , and Bella knew all about him and what he had done .
10 He certainly talked about such things , defended them against some of their critics ; but his business , what engrossed him and what he knew well , was the school .
11 Because the father is the model for the superego and the actual embodiment of authority and the demands of the cultural prohibitions against incest and parricide within the individual 's own family , it is perhaps not surprising that the antagonism towards him and what he stands for need not be limited to such self-evidently anti-social and aggressive tendencies as those revealed in the statistics of crime and violence .
12 I 've mentioned it to him and what he 's saying is come back with a firm proposal .
13 It was n't the day , it was him and what he was doing to her .
14 ‘ My instincts told me that I should be aware of him and everything he did .
15 Already , at the age of nineteen , he was experiencing the morbidity which occasionally harassed him and which he described sixteen years later in a chapter on the ‘ character ’ of Keats :
16 He was like a kind of martyr , it was as if all my failings were stones that were thrown at him and which he never complained of .
17 It was the Kent countryside that inspired him and which he wanted to be a part of .
18 By this man who had no power over him and whom he could sink with one word to Merymose .
19 Jenny , who was in love with him and whom he had asked to marry him .
20 She turned over and lay on top of him , trying to pin him down with her own slight weight , and he began to fondle her and she him , and almost at once they were making love again .
21 And whether he started it and what he said , like he was
22 Cos er erm remember that time when I called him fadge and I pegged it and he he went .
23 If there was ever a classic is about the laziest bastard on this side of Christendom and he and he he would n't do anything that supports your business at all
24 But someone sent those cars after us and whoever he is , he 'll soon know we were n't involved .
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