Example sentences of "[verb] [verb] [conj] he [verb] the " in BNC.

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1 Meanwhile we , and God too , must wait to see if he passes the test or not .
2 According to a recent report in the New York Times , Castelli has said that he wishes the archives to be fully accessible to the public and that if this were in any doubt he would donate them without charge to the Smithsonian Institute 's Archives of American Art .
3 The Spirit has shown that he validates the Christian mission among Jews , proselytes , ‘ Godfearers ’ ( as Gentile adherents on the fringe of the synagogue were called ) , and even outsiders like eunuchs and Samaritans .
4 History has shown that he made the right choice .
5 At some time he may also have sent an expedition against Normandy which was defeated , and his Helmet coin type , perhaps current from 1003 to 1009 , depicts him in armour ; according to the surviving verse on him by the Icelandic poet Gunnlaug Serpent 's Tongue , the army feared Æthel-red no less than God , and N.P. Brooks has shown that he increased the military burdens on his people by requiring more of his soldiers to wear helmets and byrnies .
6 African-Americans in South Central mostly hate Korean store owners and there 's no getting around the fact , as Jesse Jackson tried to do when he said the assaults on Koreans were not racist .
7 At 32 , the actor turned producer-director has proved that he has the clout to raise money for stage and screen and the artistic talent to ensure that it 's well spent .
8 Your husband needs to relax before he hits the sack .
9 I think Chancellor Kohl has indicated that he knows the risk to the Government 's chances of re-election if interest rates have to be raised in Britain .
10 It is also a rather different exhibition conceptually : Alfonso Perez Sanchez , former Director of the Prado and co-organiser of the show , has declared that he wants the Spanish to get to know ‘ the real Ribera ’ , which means that he has whittled down the number of works .
11 His valuation has doubled since he hit the big-time , ’ said Slaven .
12 I think he goes training because he knows the police can never find an Athletico training session .
13 The stone was heavier than he 'd thought and he bungled the throw .
14 He can already foresee the day when sales begin to fall and he wants the group to readjust their stringent stance , mainly for their own survival .
15 This was the inheritance which Nicholas II ( 1894–1917 ) pledged to uphold when he ascended the throne .
16 In the end that is the same thing as Andrew Murray has been attempting to do since he joined the Tour in 1979 .
17 He was beginning to find that he enjoyed the big offworlder 's company , and it was amazing how many things they had in common .
18 The other members began to find that he gave the faculty coherence and a sense of purpose .
19 Once outside , he did n't stop running until he reached the end of the street .
20 He did not pause to rest when he reached the next hedge , but continued on , driving his exhausted body ruthlessly onwards .
21 The view McTaggart finds unsatisfactory — that ‘ I ’ is known by description — seems to be that to which Russell had become converted when he wrote The Analysis of Mind ( 1921 ) .
22 That satisfaction would smartly have evaporated when he reached the clearing and found me gone .
23 He might also have added that he plays the game rather well .
24 And he says nineteen sixty two when I started reffing and he said the oth they 're not I 'm not giving them this one but these two are for the other mascot scene .
25 Dr Tariq would not have said that he liked the Chairman of the Revolutionary Command Council , but he admired him .
26 The papers to which he had referred , and which he kept in a tin box underneath his bed , contained an unexpected coda to this small adventure — an unfortunate little postscript which reminded me how Captain Scott must have felt when he reached the South Pole only to find that Amundsen had beaten him to it .
27 My brother prior has himself testified to her powers of grace , and says plainly that no man has been found to own that he carried the reliquary .
28 Fully two minutes must have passed before he plucked the pipe from his mouth and said : ‘ I do n't know what the document contains .
29 He knew he should have fired when he had the chance ; by leaving it too late , he 'd lost the advantage .
30 The grumbles of J. Alfred Prufrock in early Eliot are endurable if they are meant to be ridiculous , but only then ; and sitting around on Margate sands , or anywhere else , trying to connect nothing with nothing may be all right for Harvard men abroad , but ( as Eliot must already have discovered when he wrote The Waste Land ) it has nothing to do with the daily life of the Londoner .
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