Example sentences of "[pron] in [noun] [conj] he " in BNC.

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1 I have to say though that with the terms on which we 've gone into the European Monetary System , a six per cent fluctuation either way , which as I said means from two seventy seven deutschmarks up to three thirteen ; there 's quite a lot of risk there for an exporter if he prices himself in deutschmarks and he gets it wrong .
2 It would be as much as Dad could do to keep himself in order after he 'd had a drop too much .
3 ‘ Henry ’ , argues Dr Clanchy , ‘ found himself in difficulties because he was so persistent in giving preference to his overseas inheritance and ambitions than to England itself . ’
4 He had greased himself in oil and he had cooked and broiled and yearned for the magic hours of noon and six when he could down a life-saving tumbler of gin and lime .
5 A driver used to more power and rubber might expect to find himself in trouble if he attempted to maintain his normal pace with the cheapest Fiesta , but such is the confident poise of the car that it offers handling and grip of a far higher order than the tuned-for-economy engine can justify .
6 Katherine just managed to say thank you in return before he walked away .
7 Replacing the highly popular Mr Dubcek was no easy task , but on the grounds that Janos Kadar salvaged something in Hungary when he took over after the popular uprising of 1956 , Mr Husak might have achieved something .
8 Mrs Tiller presided over the one in Blackpool while he was at the grander one in Addlestone , Surrey , to which , when the Girls were playing in London , he would invite small groups for a short weekend .
9 he drew me in ink and he etched me on zinc
10 I offered Benn the chance to fight me in September and he turned me down in favour of fighting Mauro Galvano in Italy .
11 During term-time the younger children returned to Park House at weekends while their father , Viscount Althorp stayed with them in Belgravia when he visited London .
12 Despite her parents ' invitation to Harry to stay with them in London while he was back in England , he 'd written to say that he had already promised to go to Bertie Alcott 's home in Cadogan Square .
13 ‘ He saw a number of them in America when he visited during the Thirties .
14 When he appeared in the Home Circuit Court at Kingston before Theobalds J. on 26 September 1983 both counsel invited the judge to see them in chambers and he agreed to do so .
15 It was obvious to everybody in Rome that he had to marry money .
16 Pop having to return to Burma for another year with the Governor , and finally my going to meet him in Liverpool when he was sent home at the end of that year very sick , never to return to Burma .
17 And on twenty five minutes , Nigel Mott got that opening goal as an excellent through ball from Paul Biddle found him in space and he placed the ball wide of the Fairmile goalkeeper Mark Carrigan ; Fairmile were not to be perturbed by this as on their half an hour Wayne Glossop went close for the home side .
18 She looked at him in surprise as he almost shouted the word .
19 As they drove into the courtyard , she glanced at him in surprise as he kept the car engine running .
20 Maureen looked at him in surprise and he said hastily , ‘ That 's how it sounds to me .
21 A wide grin of delight had become a permanent fixture on his face , and Paul smiled at him in return as he cantered back to check the ox carts .
22 I had written to him in Edinburgh when he was in Belgium , to Belgium when he was in France and to France the very moment he arrived back in Edinburgh .
23 They 've found him in Edinburgh and he 's on his way to Heathrow or Gatwick , I forget which .
24 The French master chef , dressed in his long bespattered apron , stood by his post chopping , slicing , stirring and mixing with a vigour which drenched him in sweat whilst he swore at his apprentices for this or that .
25 Who would have thought when she had first seen him in England that he would drag her into his life , order her about , kiss her ?
26 As the recently-formed RAF Museum was still several years away from having its own permanent display building , D'Arcy persuaded the Air Historical Branch to release PA474 to him in order that he could properly restore it and keep it under cover .
27 The technical department provided a base for him in order that he could pursue Technical Studies over and above normal classes .
28 Wycliffe saw Lucy Lane look at him in astonishment as he accepted the arrangement .
29 She looked up at him in astonishment and he bent his head to drop a kiss on the tip of her nose .
30 Her large eyes were fixed on him , and she wished that she could go away and leave him in peace when he had laboured for so long and so hard .
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