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

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1 ‘ I was playing in a particular game and did not think I had done anything spectacular at all when I was approached by Heffernan who told me that he wanted me for the Ireland team to play Australia in the Compromise Rules series , ’ recalls McGilligan .
2 ‘ One evening in September , ’ he started once more , ‘ Robert told me that he found himself with nothing much to do when he had finished an afternoon lecture on the international monetary crisis .
3 He had no idea , for the letter forced him at last to admit to himself that he knew nothing about his son , that he had lost touch with him , had allowed him over the years to drift further and further away so that now they were virtual strangers .
4 He would not be true to himself if he showered us with blessings while we 're outside of his will .
5 He was pleased with the result and wanted to use it for something for himself and he adapted it for designing colour patterns for Sandra to knit on her machine .
6 One of his more lasting memorials is the Hattersley domestic loom , which since he introduced it into the islands in 1920 has produced almost the entire output of Harris tweed .
7 We owe it to the people of my own borough of Hillingdon , where only a week or so ago a teenager who had just stolen a car killed himself when he drove it into a tree at nearly 100 mph .
8 ‘ Remember one thing ! ’ he said angrily , only just controlling himself as he held her by the shoulders .
9 After school , he was waiting for me and he exposed himself to me .
10 ‘ Mac , ’ as of course he was known , would promise to bring down the wrath of almighty God on them if he found them in the Trocadero , Elephant and Castle , when they should be ‘ capable of , and available for work , ’ as one had to be in those days .
11 Her lips had no magic in them and he felt nothing but pity for her .
12 There 's one at Kentish Town , a businessman who smokes big fat cigars like this and he 's half finished them and he throws them on the train and when the doors open no-one clears out the way and he steps on and he 's such as bastard
13 No I know Chris told me cos he saw him on the morning at the garage then he .
14 He says it to you and he says it to me .
15 A furlong separated them but he knew her at once .
16 No I thought , cos I , I remember reading erm I think it 's her father who owns one of the bookshops in Woodbridge and he had this book on display , you know he sort of erm advertised it if you like and it 's , it 's properly published and everything but he had it as a a book available in his store and there was an advert in the Anglian about it , and I remember reading that she said er that he said er cos it was his daughter who had the child , that it totally knocked them for six .
17 Rereading one before he put it in the envelope , it seemed to him to be ill-organized , to have no coherent theme .
18 Though these men were perfectly acceptable to Theodore , Wilfrid is said to have declared himself unable to serve God in unity with them because he regarded them as strangers to the Catholic Church ( Vita Wilfridi , ch. 30 ) .
19 He asked about several crimes of violence that had happened in south-east Antrim and Beattie told him that he knew nothing about any of them .
20 He was formidable , laconic , self-disciplined , earnest but not humourless , and it was said of him that he did everything with a kind of good-natured fury .
21 A quick glance at him showed her that he thought nothing at all of a drive like this , clinging to the mountainside and driving much too fast .
22 She had a row with a young man named Nick Owens when they were all at the caelidhe one evening and he told her that he wanted her to be his girl and not go out with anyone else .
23 I took notice of him 'cause he knew everything about football as well as boxing .
24 She handed the glass back to him and he returned it to the restaurant .
25 I knew him as well , of course , so I contacted him and he told me about the trip . ’
26 She held the second shotgun out to him and he slung it across his chest .
27 She declines to have sexual intercourse with him and he threatens her with eviction and homelessness if she does not comply .
28 And er also many engineers when they were out their time , they went to Glasgow and for a few years , he , everybody who went from Galashiels , word got through to him and he met them at the station and got them settled in their digs in Glasgow .
29 He saw some of the storm-troopers turn their attention to him and he sprayed them with his MPSK .
30 Gaitskell never adopted me in the sense that Harold Wilson did later , but I became quite close to him and he employed me in quasi-political matters .
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