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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The political state made it clear that Robert Dundas would win his election if two additional nominal voters could be placed upon the roll , but the whole scheme would of course come to nothing should he lose any of his voters , or if Mr. Glassford would not also divide his valuation and make a second vote .
2 Whom should he thank ?
3 I may he may I may have died in the end but still , you know he wanted to keep the peace and wanted to be his friend .
4 That fella up at Cecil 's , I should he must be getting a fortune .
5 I 'll he glad when the neighbour gets back from Australia . ’
6 If only I could he he looks back on his life and he knows the power that he has experienced .
7 " I Charles Gillingham Hamilton M.A. of Stockport in the Borough of Stockport and County of Chester , Clerk , a Clergyman of the Church of England , in priest 's orders and a Graduate of the University of Dublin declare that I will discharge always to the best of my ability the duties of Headmaster of the Stockport Grammar and Free School , and that in case I shall he removed from my Office I will thereupon relinquish all claim to the Office and its future emoluments and I will deliver up possession of the School and my residence to the Trustees and that it shall be lawful for them in the same case without ejectment or other legal process to take possession of my residence and remove myself and my effects therefrom . "
8 But in case he shall die in my Lifetime then I desire that my Coffin be made by his Son in like manner as his Father was to have made the same for which I Will he shall be paid the Sum of Ten Pounds and that in such Case the said Legacy of Ten Pounds so given to his father shall cease and not be paid .
9 In his will he left £500 towards the building of a Sunday School Chapel in Edenderry .
10 But when Lucius Titius survived his will he sold his office , exacted a price , and gave it to the person to whom in his will he wished the office or its price to be given .
11 But when Lucius Titius survived his will he sold his office , exacted a price , and gave it to the person to whom in his will he wished the office or its price to be given .
12 Sir William Hamilton paid the bills ( as the creditors knew he would ) , and in his will he left her £300 and an annuity of £800 , which should have enabled her to live comfortably though not perhaps ostentatiously .
13 In his will he left £12 to be given to twelve old maids who were to act as pall bearers .
14 His death-warrant bore 58 signatures , headed by that of John Bradshaw who , born in Marple in 1602 , may have attended the School in his youth ; however , if he did , it seems to have made but little impression on him , for in his will he made bequests to increase the Masters ' salaries at his other schools , Bunbury and Middleton , and to found a new school in Marple , without mentioning Stockport .
15 His greatest memorial was the History of the School , but by the terms of his Will he also bequeathed money to endow two prizes , the Hulsean Divinity Prize and the Benjamin Varley Geography prize .
16 He died in September 1659 and was buried in Westminster Abbey ; in his will he had requested that he should be buried near to Agarde 's monument there .
17 In his will he left sizeable sums for schools he had built in his home parishes , as well as for Christ 's Hospital , of which he had been a donation governor in 1833 .
18 In his will he left the school house to trustees , and also certain almshouses , together with a yearly sum of £6 for a monthly lecture .
19 That at his will he may do danger with .
20 In his will he appointed Uncle Edwin as his art executor .
21 That as his will he may do danger with . ’
22 Crown him that/And then I grant we put a sting in him/That at his will he may do danger with
23 That was like that was like your man big Albert when they were out and this fucking fella says to him do us a favour mate and he says aye , no problem I 'll do it if I can he says well would you go out sta put your take your trousers down , show us your arse
24 To whom might he have been more attached ?
25 In his travel across the plains , Celati has created a space which may he filled with meanings , but where no single or definitive meaning can be imposed .
26 The slaughter appears to have been very great and the Shoan losses are estimated at twelve thousand killed , to which must he added twelve to fourteen thousand killed in the two previous fights when Fitaurari Gelli 's and Ras Lul Seged 's forces were annihilated .
27 More important , it was necessary that somebody should he acquainted with the details of imperial finance , and the Athenian constitution , like that of Rome in the republic , had no provision for a civil service , and like the Roman Senate , the Athenians governed and legislated as amateurs .
28 The aniseed ball was located at the base of a short tube projecting from the mine casing and a waterproof cap was required which could he removed when the limpet mine was affixed to the enemy ship .
29 And I know he had , you know he was stubborn , he would n't give in , nobody would he give in to nobody then .
30 Other cases held length after length of cloth which would he worked into dresses , over-dresses and the embroidered underpants of the bride 's trousseau .
  Next page