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

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1 And if he 's hiding , then he must have good reason for it . ’
2 ‘ When he is miserable , egad , he must keep good company !
3 times He 'll have good times Goin' oot on the randan But
4 Instead of leaving Deanein the reserves as he did with rocky he 'll keep him in the firsts and he 'll come good .
5 I want him to score goals as well , i.e like Chappy. firsts and he 'll come good .
6 She says … he 'll get good milk and be taught discipline by his mum and wo n't get too attached to humans .
7 He 'll take good care of you . ’
8 A void title on the other hand is no title at all and an innocent purchaser who buys from someone with a void title can derive no benefit from section 23 ( although , of course , he might acquire good title by virtue of some other exception to the ‘ nemo dat ’ principle ) .
9 ‘ And he might have good cause to be grateful .
10 However , in Lee v. Butler he was a ‘ buyer ’ in possession of the goods and thus , although he was not the owner , he could pass good title to an innocent purchaser ( Factors Act , section 9 , see Chapter 5 above ) .
11 He could drink good wine ; eat French food superlatively cooked , and apparently available in abundance ; be waited upon as he had been waited upon in the old days before the war , by a succession of polite , quiet , efficient , well-trained servants , all of whom were Arab , all of whom spoke perfect French .
12 Above all , the empire was the only place where he could make good immediately on his claim to represent the real France .
13 He could enjoy good relations with a France at odds with Great Britain .
14 He 'd look good in Henry VIII 's court . ’
15 And if it did n't live up to the investor 's rigorous standards , no one had any doubt that he would make good his threat of withdrawing his backing .
16 He would get good food from the basement kitchens . ’
17 If he does , he will confer good title on the new purchaser provided the resale falls within one of the exceptions to the nemo dat principle .
18 Most important of all , he will have good liaison with the local social services department , who can draw all the threads together and link his elderly patients with the organisations that can best meet their needs .
19 Thus he will obtain good title if , and when , according to the terms of his contract of purchase , property in the goods is to pass to him .
20 The transparent ‘ honesty ’ with which he will say good and bad about the people he 's worked with and around has always to be taken as having a ‘ point of view ’ ; that ‘ point of view ’ is governed by what Niki is looking for at any particular moment .
21 The question whether a man who considers himself wronged has a claim which he can make good will depend on the answer to the question : Is there a writ to meet his case or , if there is not one , can one be framed which the King 's Courts will hold good ?
22 He can see good and bad .
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