Example sentences of "of his brother 's " in BNC.

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1 His crisis is precipitated by word of his transfer to another school ; he staggers towards resigning from the school he 's at , and maybe from the profession , and then bunks off for a long afternoon 's superlager , home-brew and whisky with his brother , who is on the dole , and two of his brother 's mates .
2 When he has been a Christian for three years , we find him , in the pages of his brother 's diary , reading The Epistle to the Romans , the greatest exposition in Scripture of the themes of Original Sin , Grace and Justification by Faith .
3 It is twenty-two years since I read that letter , first published in Warnie 's selection of his brother 's correspondence , and on and off I have been thinking it over .
4 Jacob reveals by his first words to Esau that he belongs still to the world of their stiff courtesy , and not yet to that of his brother 's gay abandon .
5 Theo came on a visit , alarmed by the growing despondence of his brother 's letters .
6 Well aware of his brother 's infatuation with Joan and seeing no reason to discourage it , he regarded Anne 's arrival at the sanctuary as a step in the right direction .
7 He was , it seemed , fully aware of his brother 's attachment to Joan .
8 He was able to complete his conquest of his brother 's duchy without interruption , and to imprison for life — perhaps to blind — the only member of his family who deserved the protection of the Church .
9 When the news of his brother 's disappearance reached the White Tower , Teclis refused to believe his brother was dead .
10 One the manager of a tiling manufacturers in Swindon , the other a colleague of his brother 's : neither of the men he 'd wished to know better .
11 Only eight at the time of his brother 's accession in 1461 , he spent the early years of Edward IV 's reign in relative obscurity , overshadowed by his elder brother George duke of Clarence .
12 Edward IV made a first attempt to remedy the situation within weeks of his brother 's sixteenth birthday , when he gave Richard the land of Robert lord Hungerford , lying mainly in Somerset and Wiltshire .
13 Although the duke was later to acquire further interests of his own in Wales he never resumed the position of his brother 's leading representative there .
14 It would also threaten the stability of the polity itself , and Gloucester 's public pronouncements in this period consistently present him as the defender of his brother 's achievements against the machinations of the Woodvilles .
15 But , as a key figure in his brother 's polity , Gloucester probably knew most of his brother 's leading servants .
16 The support of his brother 's men gave him a nexus of servants throughout the country , the value of which can be seen in his measures against Sir Edward Woodville .
17 They may simply not yet have accepted that Gloucester now had his own ambitions beyond the preservation of his brother 's polity .
18 It was only after the rebellion of autumn 1483 had demonstrated that Richard had lost the support of a significant number of his brother 's men , that it made political sense to indulge in general criticism of Edward IV 's reign .
19 Terry knew by the sound of his brother 's voice that he had to do as he was told .
20 Because of his brother 's hanging , he assumed the mantle of laibon .
21 A Guardian stalwart made a telling observation about him : ‘ While Ian Wolldridge might spend hours searching for the good line , Hugh will spend the time searching for the truth ’ — and suddenly I saw McIlvanney almost as if he were a bare-knuckle fighter in one of his brother 's novels .
22 The rain was pouring when Ebenezer banged the door-knocker of his brother 's house in Denmark Place .
23 His reputation dwindled in the shadow of his brother 's achievements during the years between Marconi and World War I , and although his journalism remained incisive , it was increasingly tainted with bitterness at the perceived economic and political decay of Edwardian England .
24 Yet Fernand had spoken openly of the war and of his brother 's death without showing a trace of rancour or a desire for revenge .
25 He had been thrown violently forwards , the blood which had spurted from nose and mouth splattering the base of his brother 's coffin .
26 Only eight at the time of his brother 's accession in 1461 , he spent the early years of Edward IV 's reign in relative obscurity , overshadowed by his elder brother George duke of Clarence .
27 Edward IV made a first attempt to remedy the situation within weeks of his brother 's sixteenth birthday , when he gave Richard the land of Robert lord Hungerford , lying mainly in Somerset and Wiltshire .
28 Although the duke was later to acquire further interests of his own in Wales he never resumed the position of his brother 's leading representative there .
29 It would also threaten the stability of the polity itself , and Gloucester 's public pronouncements in this period consistently present him as the defender of his brother 's achievements against the machinations of the Woodvilles .
30 But , as a key figure in his brother 's polity , Gloucester probably knew most of his brother 's leading servants .
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