Example sentences of "he [vb mod] [verb] [adv] [pron] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He may take away my friends .
2 He may apply immediately it is served to set it aside , and also or instead of making such application , he may appeal against the imposition of the injunction .
3 erm , and , and , it could arise in many different circumstances , erm one can imagine a situation which wrongly expel erm a name from the market , well whatever the motives , that clearly distorts competition cos there 's one rule , one less competitor in the market , erm it , it 's con , it , it 's conceivable that an article eighty five argument could arise and an expel name could raise a point , whether he succeeds is another matter , but at that point and , and in relation to that he may say well I can sue you because you 've excluded me you 've restricted competition or you 've excluded a group of names
4 Or he may know exactly what he 's doing — and be doing it for reasons his companions know nothing of , his meaning anything but benevolent .
5 Like the squirrel , he should marry only someone of precisely the same blood lines as himself .
6 He was too tired for work but felt he must continue otherwise he would think back to Cranston 's words about Benedicta .
7 She realized that he must know exactly what was running through her mind .
8 The piece tests the actor 's awareness and imagination to the full , but nevertheless makes precise demands on him : he must follow exactly what the author says .
9 He 's busy now , but he 'll come soon I hope … . '
10 He 'll know exactly what 's been going on and will be only too eager to help us .
11 mm , yes I can walk along with Allen , as far and then he 'll say well I 'm just going into see
12 He 's so thick , you know he 'll say right I 'll go down the hold , I 'll do the humping , what they call humping , he 'll do that , loading these slings or bags , rather than him standing there and say well ten bags in that sling , put ten down , he could n't do that , so he 'd rather go down the hold that 's happened .
13 He wo n't tell the players and he 'll say alright I have n't got a team so he can cancel the match .
14 You ask some kid , he 'll say there you are I 've got three pens on the table now take away seven .
15 If he 's really cornered , he might think well I 've got to fight , I 've got no way round it .
16 You know that he appeared so that he might take away our sins .
17 but , but , you know if say well look , you know , we could do with twenty five and he turns round and he might say well you know , yo he might say no
18 Until then he 'd been expecting Blagg , and he might know exactly what he 'd left . ’
19 He really should go in search of his squire and order some hot water so he could wash away his own grime before sitting down to table .
20 He could go anywhere he wanted and I 'd never find him again .
21 I could see Quigley was about to make another move , but before he could do so I held out my hands , palm downwards , in a gesture much favoured by Mr Toombs in his last ecclesiastical campaign .
22 He does n't criticize the vice-president marketing 's expert judgement nor pretend he could do better himself .
23 Inevitably a feeling of despair enveloped him and he began to feel quite helpless ; his heart was in his studies and he knew that if he could manage financially he could achieve his academic rewards , but the insufficient amounts of money his father allowed him did n't permit any freedom to relax after his studies had ended .
24 He could see now it was an immense refrigerated truck weighing God knew how many tons .
25 now more nearly resembled an M and a Q. The evidence was disappearing before their very eyes and , once it was gone , Harry was not sure he could convince even himself that it had ever been there .
26 Especially when he knew he could push aside her doubts by making love to her .
27 He 'd cut short her agonised attempts to blurt out her problems .
28 He 'd tell him , he 'd get his orders from the office , cos the Deputy Harbourmaster he would go down all the sound he sound in river and see what wanted taken out , then he 'd say to my father I 'll dredge at so and so belo below docksill and docksill what they used to do they used to , my father what he 'd do he 'd put stakes on the mud , a short stake and a long stake on account of the tide and he 'd , he 'd make an imaginary on that stake , then he 'd go ashore at Wolverston , phone up what have you got on your docksill , the fella might say it 's ten feet , well he 'd say right we 'll make that twenty feet , so that 's er , that 's what he used to work on to dredge the river .
29 Yeah , he , he 'd come away I think rather happy I he , he nev , you know he begun to see here
30 On occasions like these , friends of Burton reported , he would counter-attack by releasing his temper , tearing up the room and making it quite clear and genuinely credible that whatever they did , said or tried on he would do just whatever he wanted .
  Next page