Example sentences of "he [verb] [verb] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 The impact as well as the shock of the bullet wound knocked him crashing face down to the ground , his legs all mixed up with the trolley 's wheels .
2 Part of him wants to get back to the security of home but he knows that after a few weeks there he might long for the contacts , communication and craziness of the multi-media scheme .
3 A little boy wearing a balaclava cap too large for him came trotting out of the house .
4 It was at about this time that Charles acquired a tutor and through him began to look out on the world through a learned man 's eyes .
5 Why do you think these mentions of him kept cropping up over the years ?
6 ‘ But it 'll be strange to see him go left out of the tunnel .
7 He held a seven-inch knife at Mr Stokle 's throat and ordered him to lie face down on the floor .
8 One single man lived in lodgings and his landlady was in the habit of putting in a pudding basin the lunch she had prepared for that day , for him to have warmed up on the morrow .
9 As he made to step down from the verandah he heard a footfall behind him and turned to find Lepine , already immaculate in his white suit , ready to leave .
10 Speaking after the withdrawal of the final charges Buckey , who had spent five years in prison before being released on bail in 1987 , said that he planned to move out of the state and " get some fresh air " .
11 The claim is disputed … but it 's still a good excuse for a ballooning festival.So the lawns of the Chase Hotel were busy this evening as the fist arrivals for the weekend event prepared for their ascent.We took up the offer of a flight with Ian Ashpole , who told us he planned to jump out of the balloon when we reached full height :
12 He failed to show up for the match amidst rumours that he had resigned as West Ham 's manager .
13 Most probably he got waffling on in the Royal Oak and that .
14 I think that it was when he got turned down for the job of a bus conductor .
15 Heading south he got beaten up by the Miami cops for having long hair .
16 Unfortunately he got cut off in the middle of a sentence . ’
17 Usually he got palmed off with the Mile End Road , stabbings in Chinatown , Lascars , opium dens — you name it , Stitch was on the case .
18 He got phoned up by the other players ?
19 There consul in Rome came up on an official visit and there was nearly a diplomatic incident when he got thrown out of the new university canteen he come to expect .
20 ADO Thorpe said : ‘ It was an open lorry and he got thrown about in the back .
21 She had the knack of handling him if he got worked up about the posing , she knew how to quieten him down , and this ability to put up with his disagreeable side could only mean one thing , he reasoned .
22 " Not bad — not bad at all , " replied Joseph hurriedly and he tried to lean back against the cushions in the same careless fashion as his brother while the two rickshaws rolled on together side by side through the light traffic .
23 Then he tried smiling back at the serious-faced child , for this must surely be a tease .
24 He wanted to roar out James 's name , his own name , to scream for help , he tried to pull up on the sill but his fingers scrabbled uselessly and he dropped back .
25 He tried to think back to the first Mystery he had seen , but he could only remember ‘ Eve ’ as that unshaven , white-skinned man who had left them outside the lock-up in Greathaven and gone to find work on the boats .
26 Ever a Walter Mitty character , he tried to get back into the CIA fold , but after the North fiasco they did not want to know him .
27 He tried to get back to the drawing room unheard , but she was waiting .
28 Hayes next hit Roger Ford just above the glove as he tried to get out of the way , and was out lbw ; 384 for 9 .
29 Hypnotists working for the police ask an individual , most commonly a witness or a victim , to imagine that he has gone back to the time of the crime .
30 The twentieth-century preference for ‘ the colloquial ’ in poetry may well be a temporary phenomenon ; Donald Davie 's Purity of Diction in English Verse ( 1952 ) , together with his admiration for the late Augustans , represent one attempt to revive an interest in the use of a ‘ civilized ’ diction ; it is interesting that he has to go back to the age before Wordsworth .
  Next page