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

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1 Sartre 's character the Auto-Didact was working his way through an alphabetical subject catalogue , with the result that he knew nothing of subjects beginning with the later letters ; to learn mathematics by the route Algebra , Arithmetic , Calculus , Geometry … and on to Trigonometry would be bizarre by any conventional standard .
2 He has not only tarnished his relationship with Leeds United Football Club ( the club that he owes everything to including his 2.75M price tag ) , he also shit on the manager and those players who are left at the club , who helped him win a championship medal .
3 It was a bitter irony that he condemned her for loving a man who was out of reach .
4 There is every indication that he believed it to be true , whether it was or not .
5 After his accession Richard parted with all his East Anglian estates to Howard , an indication that he regarded them as a peripheral part of his power base .
6 After his accession Richard parted with all his East Anglian estates to Howard , an indication that he regarded them as a peripheral part of his power base .
7 The Lady 's last opponent shifted his seat until he faced her across the board .
8 Pyatt has outstanding hand speed and he demonstrated it to full effect against an opponent who was clearly out of his depth .
9 And of course he goes in and the horse drops in the far side of the wee barn , and er Old goes in with his dram and he dips it into the horse trough you ken , and he turns you ken with his regimental ,
10 So I got up immediately and said it would be the end of a beautiful friendship if he accused me of necrophilia !
11 I suppose we 've been rivals in the past , when I had my column on the Daily Mail and he had his on the Daily Express , but we 've been rivals in the friendliest of terms .
12 We got the dog and give him a couple of rope ends in his mouth and he take them across the ice .
13 I have to say though that with the terms on which we 've gone into the European Monetary System , a six per cent fluctuation either way , which as I said means from two seventy seven deutschmarks up to three thirteen ; there 's quite a lot of risk there for an exporter if he prices himself in deutschmarks and he gets it wrong .
14 I ca n't read , but I took it to the priest and he read it to me . ’
15 He hated the car and he hated himself in it ; he hated what it could do to him and what it had done to him .
16 ‘ Soon after that a different Man came by car and he put me in a carrier cage and took me into the darkness of a long journey , over bumpy roads , on to a ship , and into the most terrible place of all , an iron cage with obscured windows , which raced through the night clattering and clattering , a regular rhythm of metallic sound .
17 ‘ We had a massive fight — I hit him with my handbag and he hit me with his .
18 One 911 owner once remarked to me that he had n't been terribly impressed by his car until he took it on a racetrack .
19 Franz Klammer made a skiing simulator and he had it in his garage , and what it was was a series of rolling logs .
20 Crilly , I 'll tell you about the sparkle of Belgravia , the shimmer of white marble , a sumptuous , salubrious white , the sugary white of fluffy friendship , cloudship , feely white , and the slim cobblestone road which led to the river where I met James who was fresh from Waterstone 's with his arms full of Pinter plays , O he was as a young Terence Stamp , Crilly , but for the sly cracks of wisdom about the corners of his eyes , and we drank espresso and he told me about Spain and the high mountains of India , and the Pyrenees he had taken on foot , and though I was as trite as my shopping Saturdays and my small muggy and squirming palms in summertime , he painted my body swirly-lined and peach upon a large canvas and made love to me upon the tip of the Heath with all of London a basin of rooftops beneath us while the sky loomed low in grey and pink , the Heath a dark pudding of sloping mountains , wild and white and wide as Brontë country , with only the smug suburban cliffs of Highgate Village peering from behind its sprawling hem , and big dogs scurried like brown birds to the crevice of foothills and then disappeared , so we made love for a while beneath that sky , which cast a blaze upon us the colour of cream .
21 It sprang into bright white light and he covered it with its glass globe .
22 So obviously I kept drinking the water and the next day , on the Sunday , the pain was so bad we called the doctor again and he found out I was in labour and he sent me to the hospital and they found out not until the Thursday that it was actually the cryptosporidium that had caused it .
23 It er er he pleated the he the halter into the tail of the leading horse and he took them down the road in a string like a train .
24 Claudia 's face mirrored her distress and he pulled her to him .
25 John said ‘ I 'll ask the barman if he knows anything about it . ’
26 Do unto your enemy before he does it unto you , but always make sure his back 's turned ! )
27 Accordingly , in Clarence ( 1888 ) 22 QBD 23 , a woman 's agreement to sexual intercourse with her husband meant that , surprising as it is to modern ears , he was not guilty of inflicting grievous bodily harm when he infected her with VD .
28 She was n't even aware of having spoken the words aloud until she saw his face tauten with some undefinable emotion as he held her from him .
29 Ironically , it was the motor car which saved Huntercombe — not just as a means of travel but because the wealth of car maker William Morris , later Viscount Nuffield , secured its future when he bought it in 1925 .
30 Approaching the signal box he mounted the steps , the hand-rail creaking as he used it for support .
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