Example sentences of "[conj] he [be] [prep] [det] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I appeal to the Minister : the man should not be allowed to return to his unit ; he should remain where he is at this moment .
2 He became Minister for the Arts in July 1990 and although he was in this post only a few months , he made a distinct mark .
3 So I could go on at great length , colleagues , to tell you that he 's on this committee and that committee well er and that would take me a good half hour because he 's , he 's on , he 's involved in everything in everything in the Party in the union erm , and his commitment is absolutely second to none .
4 Palace 's former England forward struck a glorious goal to serve Graham Taylor notice that he 's worth another try .
5 It 's thanks to you that he 's in this mess right now .
6 ‘ It is ordered that in the interim and an injunction is hereby granted ordering that in the events ( i ) that the medical condition of [ J. ] changes in such a way that his life is threatened but is capable of being prolonged by the application to him of intensive therapeutic measures including artificial ventilation , and ( ii ) that he is at that time in the care of the …
7 A possible clue to this unusual verbal spate of self-revelation , which caused me some surprise , was , as we now know , that he was at that time engaged in writing The Family Reunion .
8 And the fellow who told her that he was from another planet .
9 Not that he was in much danger of noticing .
10 JH : Moving on to another great love of yours , Franz Schubert ; I have always felt that he was in many ways cut short in his prime , almost as thought he was on the verge of finding himself creatively .
11 Again , the visitor to Thorikos , if taken there blindfold from the real city-state of Euboian Eretria , might well find it hard to tell the two apart , and might think that he was in another place with the same independent status : there is a fortified acropolis , a theatre and a temple — just as at Eretria .
12 Of this person she could form no idea other than that Hugh believed him to be the owner of whatever was in the sack and that he was in some way connected with the outlaws ' Camp .
13 Nor is there much to be gained from explanations of Wordsworth 's ideas which imply that he was in some way different from ourselves .
14 One month later Glassford was reported to be completing the work of preparing nominal votes , and in this his lawyer , who lacked experience in such matters , was being helped by the agent of Lord Dundas , who clearly considered him still an ally , but on August 6th , Glassford removed such illusions by making it quite plain that he meant what he had said about his price for support , and denied that he was in any way pledged to Lord Dundas :
15 Not that he was in any way merry — I 'd merely triggered off his own insomniac hysteria and his laughter quickly subsided into a sort of drained whimpering .
16 He spoke with the fervour of discovery , unaware it seems that he was by this date , imperially speaking , reinventing the wheel .
17 A character called Barny , an English hotelier , runs the Easo and he is in many ways our father figure in Benidorm .
18 His name was Jack Barnes and he 's with some firm called Woodlands Incorporated . "
19 You know he , and he 's at that point now
20 Well it , it shows come on I 'm gon na hit the brake , he 's got a chuffing accelerator pedal , a clutch and a bloody brake pedal there and he 's banging like this and it 's brake 's not working prop it 's , it 's funny , but there was a bloody tent there as well er where the Charlie Sheen is like an indian , and he 's in this tent and this bloke calls to thingybob and he presses this bloody doorbell on it on this tent , it 's funny , I tell you it is funny when you wa er when you actually watch it .
21 GRAMOPHONE has published a number of Rust 's discographical works , including British Dance Bands on Record , 1911–1945 ( in association with Sandy Forbes ) , and he was for many years a regular contributor to this magazine .
22 She had found a man who meant more to her than anything in the world and he was of another world , as he had told her .
23 Sir Michael Clapham himself retired as Chairman at the end of 1977 having served on the Council from its beginning in 1964 ( and he was at this point the only remaining member from the original Council ) , and been its Chairman for seven years .
24 And he was on that train , I 'm afraid .
25 And he was in this mood when disaster struck .
26 I wonder if he is in any way related to the Paul Hamlyn ?
27 Even if he is in less haste he will not delay , I think .
28 If there is indeed any foundation for these fears — which I do not at all suppose , for why should he not have contacted me if he was in such trouble ? — I shall settle the matter at once .
29 Well if he came out on strike with us erm and we won if we won everything we g he 'd gain nothing in the end cos he 's in another section .
30 Of course Oswald Mosley , our own exponent of Fascism , went a bit far in that direction , but he was worth some support if he stuck to the Mile End Road and did n't provoke clashes in such cherished halls of entertainment as Olympia and the Albert Hall .
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