Example sentences of "[coord] he [vb mod] [verb] a [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | The doctor may refer the patient to a dietician for a specific regime , or he may prescribe a laxative to ease the congestion . |
2 | This will necessitate a visit to the local newsagent for the papers and you will have to ask your new next door neighbour if she or he can give a note to the milkman for you or contact the local dairy yourself . |
3 | MAY RIDE : Gorfang Rotgut may ride a war boar ( +8 points ) , or a monster ( see separate Monster List ) , or he can ride a chariot pulled by either war boars or giant wolves as described in the War Machines section . |
4 | To begin a case the petitioner needed to go to the curia to get a mandate to judges at home or he could send a proctor . |
5 | Similarly , the defendant could render the case ineffective by giving or arranging for skilful testimony in his defence , or he could file a counter-case which , if successful , would result in the punishment of the original complainant . |
6 | But if , if I stay here it means that we 've , we 've a , a ho a home in the , the base , and he 'll get a transfer back guaranteed transfer back within two or three years , so it means just travelling for for erm you know , that length of time . |
7 | What you want to do is ring up the Sunday Times and get a reporter round and he 'll get a scandal story and they 'll do something |
8 | ‘ He 'll have like a styrofoam burger-box and he 'll cut a hole and put like his balls and his dick up there and then he goes — ‘ Oh ! |
9 | ‘ Be your own lawyer and you 'll have a fool for a client ’ , is an adage that calls for another : ‘ Employ a lawyer and he 'll have a pauper for a client ’ — Sunday Times . |
10 | Show it dad and he 'll have a look when he gets home . |
11 | And he 'll have a word back at you . ’ |
12 | Well Stu does a great Bruce Forsyth impression and appears to be perfecting Jimmy Hill as well , so ply him with beer and he 'll have a word with the Chelsea Chopper . |
13 | Cos I 'm a bit like John , like happy , you know I 'll laugh every time like and he 'll have a joke and that and erm John 's happy , and he 'll laugh . |
14 | If Harry wanted to play bridge , they could learn together , join a club , and he might find a chance to play bridge in the daytime when she was unavailable , and eventually get to mind less about her other activities . |
15 | A tower over ten feet tall took only thirty seconds , and he would leave a trail of them around the passageways in his more creative moods . |
16 | ‘ He played his football in a calm , authoritative way and he would analyse a game in the same quiet , clear-cut manner . |
17 | His luck — and he would have a lot of luck ( which he acknowledged generously and constantly ) — was to meet here the first of many teachers who set him on his way . |
18 | His department said the Secretary of State intended to publish a a national league table of school results within the next two weeks and he would issue a statement then . |
19 | ‘ Mark Garland is here and he would like a word with you . ’ |
20 | The years would stretch on , and he would share a bed with nobody . |
21 | Oh take it off and he would stick a couple of nails in . |
22 | He said they must meet later , she must come and eat with him in his room and he would get a bottle of wine . |
23 | And he would get a message from er Street Station from the station inspector . |
24 | Craddock in a year or two would be retiring and he would need a replacement . |
25 | If the patient is safe sitting up , he should be left alone for privacy while he is passing urine or faeces , and he should have a bell to summon help , or perhaps a stick with which to knock on the wall or floor . |
26 | ‘ I gave Bishop Casey a great bit of advice , which he did n't take : I said he should come home now , and he should write a book about his side of the affair and give all the proceeds to charity . ’ |
27 | So , er he put me onto it , oh he said you 've got to go down , he 's missing you all , he 's , and he 'd love a bit of |
28 | There might be a yachtsman come along and he 'd want a mooring , so he 'd say to my father , can you fix us up yes , get an old bit of chain and put round , put some wooden wed wedges in tighten 'em up , up , that 's his , that 's his mooring , he 'd take it somewhere in the river , have it dumped , put a buoy on it , that was , that 's like his anchor . |
29 | And he 'd have a word , Er how 's everything going along ? |
30 | T. B. You 'd have sergeants who liked to drink and he 'd have a constable in his section who knew where to get this drink , but normally amongst the sergeants , you were apart from the constables . |