Example sentences of "he [verb] [verb] we [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | Since receiving this , he has contacted us again saying he would like a change . |
2 | He has told us now what he might well have feared the dead man could tell us . |
3 | But I think he has told us truly , so far as he knows truth . |
4 | The Evil One may not have come between us and God on a personal level , but as an army he has scattered us all over the place , dumped us unceremoniously in our little religious ghettoes and subcultures , and left us to our own devices . |
5 | I just did n't want to talk about our son , to tell how he has driven us almost insane with worry . |
6 | These first lines of ht book , do n't hesitate to bring the reader right to the core of the situation of Pip 's life , Charles Dickens puts the information he needs to give us right in front of our noses , there are no complications added . |
7 | Doctor what , if that happens Doctor says that the next time he wants to see us along with him . |
8 | He wants to show us off , for Christ sake . ’ |
9 | He said hardly anything , I knew he really did n't want to be with us ( with Caroline ) but he 'd caught us up ; he ca n't have spotted from behind who we were , he was obviously going the same way . |
10 | I assumed he 'd found us somewhere else to live while it was being rebuilt . |
11 | He 'd told us earlier that he was planning on taking a woman to Tramp that night . |
12 | Is he guaranteeing to tell us where everyone of the cooks is going to come at the next Policy Meeting . |
13 | When he gets to know us better we 'll get a hell of a welcome when we go in . |
14 | " We 'll only say , " Stephen said , " he keeps following us about . |
15 | He stayed with Palace , totted up 180 league appearances and tried all he knew to get us back to Division Two . |
16 | He took us out in his boat a couple of times , and he offered to take us over to the Treshnish Isles , but the forecast was n't too good , so we never made it . |
17 | ‘ I do n't know why he had to rout us out . |
18 | I remember him saying it was a shame that he had to punish us both when only one of us was being naughty . |
19 | When he is n't at work he likes to take us out to visit our nanny . |
20 | He wanted to pass us up the line of responsibility . |
21 | How had he managed to get us as far as that ? |
22 | He 's tricked us again , yeah . |
23 | He 's tricked us again . |
24 | People would say in America , ‘ He 's given us back our self-respect . ’ |
25 | 2 A habitual collocation of two or more words whose combined meaning is not deducible from a knowledge of its component parts and of their grammatical relations to each other : He 's a real pain in the neck , and I 'm fed up to the teeth with the mess he 's landed us in . |
26 | He 's made us really meet real people , you know what I mean , people with handicapped children , and to me I find them more real than some of my friends that live in another world , fantasising about the future , you know , ‘ What 's the kids going to be when they grow up ? ’ |
27 | He 's seen us before . |
28 | He 's invited us over to his place for the circus and if we like it we can have one here . |
29 | He 's built us up from the ruins of 1987 . |
30 | The Big Man is just a voice on the phone : he 's left us too long . |