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

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1 The result was that he left my flat in a fuming temper , very gruff but very sober , and the broadcast was , I was given to understand , of consummate skill and effectiveness .
2 ‘ When I told him , his reply was that he thought I had liked going there , and he burst out with , ‘ Thank goodness you told me .
3 The inevitable consequence of his marriage was that he forfeited his fellowship , and the security it had given him .
4 On the facts the sole issue was whether he believed himself to be the beneficiary .
5 The only reason he did n't stop to annihilate both of us on his way home was that he knew there was n't a minute to lose .
6 And I fancy that erm a large part of his animus against latterday Oxford philosophy was that he suspected it of covert idealism , erm a preoccupation simply with the knowing mind , insufficient attention to the facts of the world as presented by science .
7 And the only way these can make a difference is if he shares them , tests them out , listens to other ideas and looks for ways to put them into practice .
8 Another thing about Steven Hughes Conference is that he knows what he 's talking about , on on shop floor iss issues like health and safety and those colleagues who were present at the launch of the G M B's National Health and Safety Campaign will confirm that especially the way he described the Chief Executive of the Health and Safety Executive .
9 If an owner dwelt in the township where his land was situated the logical inference is that he occupied it himself , although there was nothing to prevent him letting off part or all of it : the Langley Marish man Richard Collis features as ‘ tenaunt to ye Queene , in landes the yerely rente , vs ’ .
10 Anyway , the upshot was that he demanded there be a committee meeting this Thursday to work out a club strategy . ’
11 Either Mr. Woodford had a twinkle in his eye or was just a good salesman , but the upshot was that he supplied my grandmother over many years , in his turn his son carried on and continued serving my mother , right up to 1949 when the Salisbury round had only two customers left .
12 The difference was that he accepted her attempt at consolation , taking her palm between both of his own hands , holding it gently and meeting her compassionate gaze with the glimmer of a smile .
13 But within twenty-four hours I told Ted that his only chance of carrying on as Leader was if he submitted himself to an early election through the 1922 Committee .
14 Rachel asked suddenly as they drank black coffee , because the question had been burning on her mind for some time , and she told herself it was important strategically to find out , although she suspected the truth was that he fascinated her .
15 Choices of ends , as of means , are debatable in terms of public tests ( of whether things are in fact as the agent imagines them , whether his reactions as observed in his behaviour are as he feels them to be ) , but can take account of public observations only to the extent that they are subjectively confirmed .
16 The trouble with the hon. Gentleman is that he believes his own propaganda .
17 The other is that he heard me following , and staged the attack on himself , with the help of some accomplice unknown — for it could n't have been done alone , could it ? — to put himself in the clear , and immobilise me long enough for the other person to get away , and the body to be well downstream .
18 So Rob 's instruction was that he put them in those files and I did n't think it was a particularly good idea because everything 's easier to find if it 's in the envelopes that we 've put them in .
19 The tragedy of man is that he declares himself autonomous of God and in consequence is condemned to live East of Eden .
20 A felicitous footnote to that incident is that he got his cake after all .
21 A clergyman in his late thirties recently said : ‘ No-one has asked me about my praying since I was ordained ! ’ — whether he wanted anyone to ask him was not clear , but the implication was that he needed it !
22 My first thought was that he meant his feeling for me .
23 In general , these private archives served to make lineage history : a man kept his own papers , and his father 's and grandfather 's if he inherited them .
24 ‘ … and the pathetic thing was that he thought he had just recovered from a long period of madness . ’
25 The only thing was that he said it after Bridgend had beaten Wales a week earlier .
26 The next thing was that he wanted her to hold the bulge .
27 I said he seemed like a nice kid , and Hart said : ‘ The story is that he killed somebody , when he was thirteen years old . ’
28 His real problem is that he believes it all .
29 Welsh bardic tradition was that he carried his offensive into the heartland of Gwynedd .
30 Smith was a painful blustering bully of a man whose only redeeming feature was that he knew his job .
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