Example sentences of "and [art] [noun sg] he have " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 To reach Ariel and her mother , he had to cross the stream ; he did so , night after night , using stepping stones over unearthly flashes of phosphorescence in the water , and stepping up on to the further bank , still unwilling , still keeping his mind on Rebecca and the love he had sworn to her , until once more he found himself at the entrance of Ariel 's cabin , once more gave orders to the guard to leave him , and entered to speak to her , disturbing her rest , though she had come to expect his call ; then after their unsatisfactory exchanges , he would lift the fronds at the entrance and leave again , only to succumb once more , and toss himself off in rage and helplessness , before he skulked back to Belmont .
2 But her lips were already parted , awaiting the warmth and the love he had deprived her of so long .
3 The Frenchman 's dark aquiline features and unsmiling silences made him think of history-book pictures he 'd seen of the warrior heroes of ancient Greece and Rome , and the dismay he had felt at first when their car had struck the Annamese villager had increased his sense of awe .
4 It allowed him a view of the patio and put Schmidt between him and the door he 'd entered by .
5 Just a few weeks ago Safet was re-united with his mother , wife , and the daughter he had never seen , Emina .
6 A. in Reverie was undoubtedly the painting of the season , and the portrait he had recently finished of Mrs C — , the celebrated actress , was acclaimed — and not only by the sitter — as the best likeness of her striking looks ever achieved .
7 Fenella looked at Floy and remembered about the Robemaker and the way he had captured Nuadu and rendered them all helpless , and about the exiled Court and the sidh and the Tree Spirits that Miach had almost awoken , and which might turn out not to be friends , but enemies .
8 She did n't like the sound of the ‘ second skin' bit at all , and the way he had kidnapped her had been terrifying .
9 Guido 's totally unexpected reference to Arnie , and the way he 'd cocked his head at her and smiled as he 'd said it , had thrown her and made her feel totally vulnerable .
10 It certainly explains the mask and the way he has been avoiding his friends .
11 His heart seemed to leap inside him , at the sheer beauty of her now , and the realisation he had produced this change .
12 Because Mr Skinner is a former miner and the committee he has joined will be dealing with a bill to give the private sector a bigger share in the coal industry .
13 As a retreat conductor , preacher and speaker for religious communities in the Assembly and the Synod he had few rivals .
14 Almost , but not quite , she had come between him and the work he had had to do in New York City .
15 Custom granted a tenant-at-will a full quarter 's notice and compensation for his crops and the work he had put into the farm if he went before the harvest was gathered in .
16 It is n't necessary to tell you that the West Riding owes its position in the vanguard of educational thinking and practice to a few people , of whom Basil was one of the most distinguished , and the work he has done will still go on .
17 Eventually the contest between the new Governor and the man he had replaced became violent : Balboa and four of his colleagues , summoned from their Pacific base to discuss ‘ matters of common concern ’ with Pedrarias , were instead arrested .
18 He knew the woman to be a protégée of Count Zhinsky , head of Russian Intelligence , and the man he had met in Collins Coffee House .
19 I remembered only too well Mrs Reed 's description of my character , and the promise he had given her to warn teachers at Lowood about my wickedness .
20 He banged down the rucksack and the basket he had been carrying and looked without liking at the unencumbered Beuno .
21 From there , the crossing and the distance he had covered on that path , to the place where he was found , would take him no more than half an hour — less , if he was a brisk walker , and it was raining , he 'd be no longer than he need out in it .
22 Its growth was to cause a storm of protest in the next century from archbishops less inclined to travel than Sigeric ; but we need not doubt that it arose because Sigeric and his like were delighted to have an excuse to go on pilgrimage , and the diary he has left of his movements dwells especially on the many churches in Rome worth a pilgrim 's attention .
23 And he started up in the spring and the bucket he 'd been carrying had left a ridge in his hand .
24 No brief article can do justice to Sir Charles ' many contributions and the influence he has had .
25 He became angry and frustrated , having struggled so hard to rise above his humble background to become a physician , and the marriage he had seen as his link to success was more like a chain binding him to the spoilt daughter of the man whose position he envied .
26 After Ryan , and the irritation he had often had with her , she was worried that Leo might become the same .
27 He 'd feel a little bit of pity for his mother and the labrador he 'd owned at eight , awe at the dead pop stars and disgust at the lack of fashion and the bad music played for the occasion .
28 And the Frenchman he had just killed might do so .
29 He was wearing the démodé pinstriped suit he 'd got from a junk-shop for a production of Arturo Ui ( ‘ grossly overplayed' — Glasgow Herald ) and the tie he 'd worn as Harry in Marching Song ( ‘ adequate if uninspiring' — Oxford Mail .
30 He was sitting on the edge of the bed , his collar loosened and the tie he had worn at dinner hanging loose about his neck .
  Next page