Example sentences of "[adv] he [verb] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Suddenly he dashed over to the door and put out the light .
2 Perhaps he came up against the Edwardian equivalent of a conservation lobby .
3 Sure enough he came up with the perfect solution .
4 Now , however , Freud expands that concept as well and interestingly enough he goes back to the first term he used for repression .
5 So he gets out of the cab .
6 So he walked back to the guest house where Ranulf and Maltote were locked in a fierce game of dice .
7 So he walked back into the piazza , while the church bells rang out with a dud sound , for the priest never had learnt how to stop the bell cutting its own resonance on the return of the clapper , and the musicians of the town who could have taught him were all adversaries of the church , like Davide 's father .
8 So he goes out into the storm and into wild nature , together with ‘ the wolf and the owl ’ , while his daughters and son-in-law close their doors on him ( 306ff . ) .
9 So he stays out to the centre .
10 So he got out of the car .
11 So he booked in at the John Radcliffe Cardiac Unit … close to his home in Marlow .
12 And so he went on through the calculator to get the number of ways for ten buttons — 3,628,800 .
13 So he went round to the pool and noticed , at first , how the neat tables were littered with old newspapers and the ashtrays loaded with cigar ends .
14 so he went back on the night time , got the bags how embarrassing , he did it
15 So he went out to the car and asked mother how old is Rod ?
16 and so he came round with the bread and he said I 'll let you have the recipe and I thought , so I am now
17 So he came down to the vestibule , where the three doors were , and under the sills of the two great doors light shone , warm and enticing , and the third was behind a musty leather curtain .
18 At ten o'clock he rode out from the Elysée to be greeted by the cheers of the people , and on entering the Place de la Concorde he was saluted by cries of ‘ Vive l'Empereur ! ’ and shouts of ‘ To the Tuileries ! ’ .
19 Denis made no acknowledgement but before turning away he looked up at the sky , now completely hidden in dark cloud .
20 But soon he took off from the earthly tediousness of the concrete for a glide in purer air .
21 Anyway he woke up in the middle of the night , sat up and spewed up all over Sandra !
22 Finally he lay down in the snow and determined to die , for his stamina had failed him and he had not found the Dwarves ; and he did not want to go back to the life of killing he had led .
23 Finally he drove back to the main road .
24 Finally he wandered through into the kitchen , pulled off his jacket and draped it over the back of a chair .
25 Sex is an animal quality which must somehow he pushed on to the other side of the great divide .
26 Yesterday he left out of the second Test against the West Indies his second humiliation of the winter after being 12th man for the first Test .
27 Yesterday he went back to the city to see if the voters to whom he spoke had changed their minds
28 He stepped back , pausing to think , but the more he tried to invent reasonable explanations , the more he came back to the obvious truth : someone had put out the light and locked him in .
29 ‘ And once he woke up in the early morning , and saw a rat in the middle of the floor , looking at him .
30 Two nights later he woke up in the small hours and lay there coldly .
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