Example sentences of "[verb] [conj] he [verb] [pron] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | She could ring Jamie and suggest that he write something for it . |
2 | ‘ You did n't know that he acquired them through his wife who must have got them while she was housekeeper-companion to Mrs Armitage ? ’ |
3 | He had forgotten that he held it in his hand . |
4 | I do n't know whether he got it from here , or from another source , but it 's very strikingly similar . |
5 | You do n't really know whether he wants you to or not do you ? |
6 | You do n't know whether he did it from an entrepreneur 's point of view , or from er |
7 | The Vicar was reluctant to accept as he knew nothing of this , but Mr Baker insisted he should accept as was his right . |
8 | She sat there , quivering as he took her in his arms , kissing her so sweetly that she thought the pain of love would tear open her heart . |
9 | Ronni looked into his eyes and smiled at the compliment , inwardly shuddering as he took her in his arms and proceeded to lead her in time to the music . |
10 | Her whole body trembled as he took her in his arms . |
11 | hinting that he had plenty in the bank . |
12 | In the second play , Audience , Ferdinand is called in by the head maltster , played by Freddie Jones , who insists that he joins him for a drink and a chat . |
13 | THE Environment Secretary , Mr Chris Patten , yesterday wrote to Mr Neil Kinnock , the Labour Party leader , demanding that he dissociate himself from proposals designed to stop the growth of second homes . |
14 | Where , in competition with the liquidator of an insolvent company , a creditor of the company was successful in obtaining a renewal of the certificate ( though he had neither right to , nor possession of , the premises in respect of which the certificate was granted ) and admitted that he held it in trust for the company 's creditors , he was ordered to deliver up the certificate to the liquidator : Wm . |
15 | Dunlop refused and for the first time revealed that he considered himself to be the sole owner of the horse . |
16 | But in the very next poem he says that he did it for a change of diet , a bout of ‘ physic ’ as it were , needed after over-indulgence : ‘ being full of your ne'er cloying sweetness , /To bitter sauces did I frame my feeding ’ ( 118 ) . |
17 | Her memoirs formed the inspiration for the film ‘ The King and I ’ , although Thomson 's portraits of the King show that he looked nothing at all like Yul Brynner . |
18 | Hari gestured that he follow her through the door into the small back yard and from there into the small workshop . |
19 | I noted that he pronounced it in eighteenth-century fashion : ‘ m ’ verse' . |
20 | It was said that he learned it by practicing shadowboxing to popular tunes that ran exactly three minutes on the gramophone . |
21 | It could be argued that he saw it as something of a homecoming : Neil had attended Yeovil Grammar School for a time when his father 's work took the family there . |
22 | Qualified privilege may be claimed if the member of the council making the statement about a person can show that he made it without malice and in pursuit of a public duty . |
23 | But what happens if he gives it to his wife ? |
24 | He reminded them of all the things that he 'd said and done and he prepared them for their mission in the world . |
25 | He will do if he gets it into his head but he got in trouble you see , got in with the wrong crowd and |
26 | Mr Robert Cole , a CND vice-chairman , was jailed for 14 days at Blaenau Ffestiniog , Gwynned , for refusing to pay a £150 fine imposed after he chained himself to a container of nuclear waste last August .. |
27 | Until he 'd before he took me to hospital ! |
28 | If a third person steps in and gives a consideration for the discharge of the debtor , it does not matter whether he does it in meal or in malt , or what proportion the amount given bears to the amount of the debt . |
29 | He did n't speak as he led her through a stone-floored hallway to a sweeping staircase . |
30 | The myth that a man makes has transformations according as he sees himself as hero or villain , as young or old , but it is essentially the same myth ; Tom Jones is not the same person , but he is the same myth as Squire Western ; Midshipman Easy is part of the same myth ; Falstaff is elevated above the myth to dwell on Olympus , more than a national character . |