Example sentences of "he [verb] [pron] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 What did 'e buy it for if 'e did n't want it ?
2 'E told us on Sunday at the sermon .
3 Did 'e tell yer about 'is boxin ? ’
4 'E put yer into David Copperfield . ’
5 The Minister 's only defence I do not recall him using it in Committee — against the charge that he is wantonly selling public assets cheaply is that we always have recourse to the Public Accounts Committee .
6 Gina had remained silent after Rune 's surprise announcement , allowing him to conduct her through the gates and across the road to the Mercedes .
7 I debated whether to call on him to kill him for his slanders before I came here to try to see her , and ask her to have me back — if you think I would make her a suitable husband , that is .
8 Gina forced him to staple it to the living-room wall behind the settee and opposite the television .
9 Furthermore , modern medical training may well encourage him to see himself as a scientist applying particular skills to solve a problem , rather than as dealing with people .
10 It 's just that this other woman to whom he comes fresh enables him to see himself in a different , more exciting and rejuvenating light .
11 It had indeed been , as it happened , impossible for him to see her at the times she suggested .
12 She felt sorry for him again , and worried because it must hurt him to see her like that .
13 Glaring from one to the other as they stood on either side of the bed , she said crossly to Lucy , ‘ So you 've brought him to see me at last .
14 He thought to himself ‘ I do n't want him to see me like this ’ .
15 Steve Royle says they used the tank for teaching people to row and it has enabled him to see lots of students and they can now coach everybody the right technique .
16 I can arrange for him to see you at once when you ask for him . "
17 Dr G 's emphasis on the creative potential of physics leads him to see it as an ‘ arts subject ’ ; Dr L , on the other hand , sees the differences between the sciences and the arts as ‘ enormous ’ .
18 James V ordered that the Crown of Scotland be remodelled in time for him to wear it at the coronation of his second Queen , Mary of Guise-Lorraine , at Holyrood Abbey in February 1540 .
19 And the small seed of anger against him knotted itself inside her into a hard little core of resentment .
20 The gunman forced him to drive him to a stretch of the A61 near Thirsk , North Yorkshire .
21 I might just as well ask him to drive me to the nearest station .
22 I saw him flush it down the toilet so that no-one will laugh at his spotty chest in the showers !
23 For years I allowed him to treat me like dirt .
24 The sculptor is encouraged to deepen the relief to make the figures stand out better ; and this in turn , making them more like statues , encourages him to treat them in the convention of free sculpture rather than that of drawing .
25 Our closeness to him involves us in his struggle .
26 I was so angry that I wrote a furious letter to him accusing him of being un-Christian and ignorant , and also wrote to the Archbishop of Canterbury , whom I also regard as ineffectual .
27 The incident was reported in the press , however , and his secretary was quoted in one newspaper as saying , " Many Jewish people have written to him accusing him of anti-semitism .
28 After his retirement , I might try to persuade him to enjoy himself by accompanying me to whatever seaside resort the Conservative party attends for its conference next October — I will ensure his safety of passage into the hall — so that he can see how few pinstripe suits there are , let alone the mythical hats of which he spoke .
29 She had n't expected him to greet her with ecstatic joy — his emotions were n't extreme like Lowell 's thankfully — but neither had she expected a degree of embarrassment .
30 ‘ I would n't let him treat me like that . ’
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