Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] himself to [be] " in BNC.

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1 When the shot was first used editorially , illustrating a story on alcoholism , the man wrote a furious letter to Doisneau 's agency , Rapho , in which he revealed himself to be a respected professor at the Sorbonne .
2 As the Doctrine Commission puts it , ‘ He exposes Himself to being acted upon and , in that sense , being compelled to change . ’
3 That day he committed himself to being a busker .
4 He imagined himself to be in the centre of the city now , surrounded by its magnificent old crumbling buildings , its churches and palaces , villas and castles filled with the rich trappings of the centuries and set about by the bustle , the noise , the filth , squalor and abject poverty of the streets .
5 It was to the former that he believed himself to be responding .
6 ( 2 ) Where property or a right or interest in property is or purports to be transferred for value to a person acting in good faith , no later assumption by him of rights which he believed himself to be acquiring shall , by reason of any defect in the transferor 's title , amount to theft of the property .
7 During the year they had been together , she had seen him time and again in the dark quiet hours when he believed himself to be unobserved .
8 I looked at his face , which was something I did seldom , for I did n't like it , and saw that he did n't believe me ; that he found it inconceivable that I should n't love him ; that , ageing and unmarried though he was , he believed himself to be irresistible .
9 Absorbing his father 's deep piety , he believed himself to be in direct communication with angels , and with the Lord himself , who had predestined him to be ‘ King of Kings and Solar King of the World ’ , sent to repopulate his nation .
10 The discovery that he was still here , that his heart had found time , in that sinister cell he inhabited , to entrench itself in the obsessions of his lifetime , and that he believed himself to be in contact with the ghost of the dead king , were complications Huy could have done without .
11 He was pushing manhood , and much too well aware of that , though he believed himself to be much nearer maturity than he actually was .
12 He knew he was , in some ways , a priggish , unimaginative man : he believed himself to be also an honest one .
13 Where property or a right or interest in property is or purports to be transferred for value to a person acting in good faith , no later assumption by him of rights which he believed himself to be acquiring shall , by reason of any defect in the transferor 's title , amount to theft of the property .
14 On the facts the sole issue was whether he believed himself to be the beneficiary .
15 This process is analogous to a buyer at an auction paying more than he can afford because he allows himself to be swept along by the bidding .
16 He shows himself to be here , as he did in his earlier Deconstruction : Theory and Practice , an admirably lucid and urbane expositor of difficult ideas .
17 In respect of God 's being , the fundamental axiom with which Barth works is that God is ‘ eternally and antecedently in himself ’ what he shows himself to be in Jesus .
18 One mattered for him personally : he showed himself to be his own man .
19 In Have I Got News For You he showed himself to be quick , witty and well able to take jokes levelled against himself .
20 I did not have to pretend that he was a great man : by his acts , his understanding , and his solicitude , and by the example he set and maintained of standards higher than those of his fellows , he showed himself to be one .
21 In his letters to Gundobad , in some of his sermons , and in his versification of the first two books of the Bible , he showed himself to be a reasonable theologian .
22 With less alacrity he allowed himself to be guided across the other lane of the avenue , on to the safety of the pavement , and to an oddly impressive square , framed by the Catholic Cathedral , the Opera House , and the old Royal Library .
23 He watched their departure through a spreading mist , and when the last car had gone and the avenue was silent except for the long sigh of grass , he allowed himself to be taken back to his room .
24 It was as if poets owed an explanation to the audience for being what they were , to bring creatures apart down to the level of ordinary folks ; as if the poet might be indulged his little failings and eccentricities as long as he allowed himself to be democratically mauled in public by thoughtless questioners or — even worse , much worse — by fellow-poets or by those who had poetic pretensions and who found in ‘ question time ’ an opportunity to assuage their jealousy or seek revenge for their own incompetence and mediocrity .
25 Linguistically , the text presented no challenge , as he allowed himself to be guided by the two translations already in use in the Anglican liturgy , those of the Book of Common prayer psalter , and the Authorised Version of the Bible .
26 He allowed himself to be hustled into the background of affairs by men with narrower views and nearer objectives . "
27 What machinations might not his rivals — other MPs and would-be MPs in his constituency — engage in behind his back if he allowed himself to be so absorbed in parliamentary affairs as to be negligent in the continuous wooing of his voters ?
28 She would be seated in front of his desk before he allowed himself to be near her ; then he would lean against the same side of the desk as she .
29 Afraid and thrown in turmoil he allowed himself to be drawn away , but he could not push that lovely face from his thoughts .
30 He allowed himself to be driven towards one wall by a new series of attacks , then kicked , rolled , and dived forward under Alexei 's guard .
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