Example sentences of "[art] [noun sg] he [verb] [prep] " in BNC.

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31 We got to know all the money he had from these grants to get all these machines and all these .
32 It helped make the artist 's name and was bought in 1912 by the poet Hugo von Hoffmannsthal with the money he made from writing the libretto to Richard Strauss 's Der Rosenkavalier .
33 During these past ten years , he had learned a great deal about his stepfather 's business ; not only did he trudge the streets collecting money , which he then took to the bank after it had been religiously recounted by Luther , but he was the one who made all the entries into the ledgers ; he was the one who always met with accountants and reported back to his stepfather , who constantly grumbled that he was ‘ too ill and racked with pain' to weigh himself down with the burden of meetings and ridiculous men in ridiculous suits , with their ridiculous ideas that a man should always invest the money he earns with the sweat of his brow …
34 Ralph Connelly is going to be spending the money he earns from it pretty soon .
35 Paramount , for example , as well as providing Korda with the money he needed for his first English films , made a deal with Wilcox 's British and Dominions company to supply them with 12 pictures annually on budgets of £30,000 apiece .
36 Eventually , most of his estates in Northumberland were entailed upon the Percy family , who may indeed have advanced him some of the money he needed in 1332 .
37 Especially if he 's planning to take over London with the money he makes from selling that fucking cocaine . ’
38 ‘ So the money he gives to Osman must come from somewhere else .
39 People generally gave him a wide berth because of the smell he carried with him .
40 Brown felt that Nicaea was now descending into the chaos he felt inside himself , that had torn him apart since his wife 's death .
41 Eastwood 's superb kicking was the vital difference between the sides , although he had little chance of grabbing the try he needed for a career total of 100 as Hull took a winning route up the middle of the field .
42 I have my leather case , hardly bigger than the case he takes to the office every day .
43 This last one , the text he sent from Istanbul — the publishers took care of the proofreading , of course — that one I believe I 've got here .
44 Finally he has decided that I 'm just the vet he needs to be responsible for their health . ’
45 and then he can get the computer he wants without moaning and then can get everything done in the bedroom without worrying about it
46 What , drink with a man — drink the whisky he paid for — and then lie in wait to kill him ? ’
47 The writers of the four Gospels show their awareness of this strategy by the emphasis they place on his relationship to the twelve and the teaching he shares with them .
48 And the description he gave of the girl was a perfect portrait of Sandy .
49 The faith he received from his parents probably needed greater nourishment .
50 In his statement of claim the plaintiff admitted that since termination of the contract he had by reason of continuing to work within the insurance industry acted in such a way that , if the contract were still subsisting , he would have been in breach of clause 9A .
51 The term " " riche mede " " is repeated at line 191 , thus enveloping Wilekin 's opening speech in this dialogue and emphasizing the meretricious nature of the contract he proposes with Dame Sirith .
52 The chief superintendent seemed to revel in the reprimand he issued to her .
53 At the election he stood as the architect 's architect , pledged to stand up for quality of design .
54 Leading Aircraftsman ( LAC ) Derek Chapman joined 192 at Watton , straight from Boy Entrant training as an Air Wireless Mechanic in 1953 and during his time with the Squadron he rose to the rank of Sergeant .
55 He was a brilliant but also a tortured thinker , in many ways a solitary and tragic figure , his personality marked by a tendency to depression , and by the decision he made in 1843 to break off his engagement to Regine Olsen .
56 The judge can not be faulted either on the course he took or on the decision he reached on the material before him .
57 But the glory he gained for his ‘ discoveries ’ at Piltdown was shortlived .
58 Coppice worker Bill Foreman , who is harvesting wood for a river stabilisation project , and his dog Meg in the woodland he manages near Sproughton
59 The gang he assembles for ‘ the killing ’ includes the racetrack cashier , a crooked cop , a bartender , a reformed alcoholic and a hired killer who causes a diversion by shooting the leading horse in a top race .
60 It was the experience he gained in Greenock which enabled him to go to the United States and feature so prominently in American deaf education .
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