Example sentences of "one [prep] his " in BNC.

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1 And er he used to go there for meat but he used to buy two lots , one for his o his own place and one for the farm he had you see .
2 The firm has already offered Coronation Street romeo Reg Holdsworth one for his honeymoon .
3 His key putts came from ten feet at the last two holes — one for his final birdie , the other for par .
4 Fifteen two fifteen four fifteen six twenty eight two is ten , six is sixteen and one for his knob , is seventeen .
5 Fifteen two fifteen four fifteen six two is eight one for his knob is nine .
6 One for his knob .
7 Fifteen two fifteen four two six two 's eight one for his knob is nine .
8 It is not altogether satisfactory to call a print by an artist on the same theme as one of his paintings a description .
9 I was curious to see what shrift she would receive in Naipaul 's novel : the work of a man who has been spoken of by an old friend , the novelist Paul Theroux , as having in earlier times been ‘ merciless , solitary , and ( one of his favourite words ) unassailable ’ .
10 In that respect , Kundera could have fooled at least one of his readers ; but I do see that it belongs to the point of it all that the uncommon Jaromil should be thought humanly representative .
11 Raconteur and raisonneur , in his art as in his personal life , he is a concealed author who is evident enough in his hotly opinionated fiction : he is not given to expounding his own passionate opinions there , but can be recognised without difficulty in almost every aspect of every one of his novels , including the speech assigned to his often disputatious characters .
12 She is entrusted , on one occasion , with what might seem a rudimentary version of one of his own opinions .
13 On this occasion she is at a posh party , where she has taken a glass of champagne , but only ‘ to be sociable ’ — a motive which in anyone else would have driven Patrick to contemplate another of the umpteen blows he feels like unleashing — when the novelist unleashes one of his phonological jokes , which play on vagaries of pronunciation .
14 Shakespeare is the most widely known and read of the classical playwrights and it is for this reason that a piece from one of his plays is nearly always obligatory at a drama school audition .
15 He has just broken one of his records deliberately and is on his knees picking up the pieces as he talks to himself .
16 At the sermon , Father McKenna introduced one of his altar boys , Colm by name , and got him to tell the story about how he and his altar boy teammates had recently beaten another altar boys ' team by eight goals to five .
17 Sometimes he walks slowly over and inspects one of his plants .
18 He was dropping one of his tools and let forth a number of obscenities .
19 Why , even Peggy herself had been one of his targets — until he realized there was no chance for him there .
20 Magnus could have made one of his rude jokes which would really have got Claire going .
21 That Agatha Christie 's reading was wide-ranging can not now be denied , but , even so , the source of one of Hercule Poirot 's favourite ploys — almost , it could be said , his trademark , the gathering together of the suspects at the climax of one of his investigations — is surprising .
22 The career of one of his Foreign Office contemporaries had been said to have foundered after he said ‘ Pepper and salt ’ to the wife of a diplomat with uncertainly coloured hair and a poor command of the English language .
23 He did n't even want to consult with one of his colleagues .
24 He was described by one of his students as being ‘ a brilliant man but so practically inept that he needed help to cross the road safely ’ .
25 One of his marvellous women , when anyone asks her anything about herself , she just rolls out that line …
26 He turned to James in amazement and saw that he was enjoying his surprise , as though it confirmed one of his arguments .
27 The young man scanned the paper , held it out , and as James 's fingers reached for it , dropped it , eyed him , and said in a carrying voice , ‘ I see you are mad , but does even a lunatic suppose that one of His Majesty 's officers would bind himself to oppose the law and refrain from arresting criminals ? ’
28 One of his eyes squinted outwards , he looked massively strong , he always edged in sideways , moving the heavy door with his right shoulder .
29 When he commits himself to an assignment — be it a poem , a book , a song , or merely aiding a fellow-scribbler 's itch , he does it with gusto — con brio , as he might annotate one of his scores .
30 Our second meeting , once the regulative café au lait had been taken and a strenuous five hours of talk had been put behind us , was concluded by a guided tour of his beloved Montreal , whose night-time allurements were enthusiastically described in a car hired for the occasion , and concluded by a celebratory meal at one of his favourite Indian restaurants , toasting each other 's health and futures in an excellent Chablis .
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