Example sentences of "he [verb] [pron] [prep] a [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 It 's just that this other woman to whom he comes fresh enables him to see himself in a different , more exciting and rejuvenating light .
2 God under takes to teach us through the Spirit if we will allow him to lead us into a closer understanding of and obedience to Jesus Christ .
3 Those who knew him describe him as a typical Oxford don , courteous , charming , an unassuming man to whom fame came very late .
4 As she went upstairs she saw him toss something in a little glass down his throat in one gulp and she saw the swollen nicotine-stained fingers and the watery bad-tempered eyes .
5 He epitomises the polite , friendly grandfather figure , all six foot three of him greeting me with a firm handshake .
6 Dennis had given us a rough time in the previous two Tests and so I started to chat to him to get him in a favourable mood for when it was our turn to bat .
7 ‘ Your comment about him finding it difficult to live with the idea of someone being better than him forced me into a complete rethink .
8 He made something of a jovial name for downright failure : a big , heavy man ( probably seventeen stone ) , he barely averaged more than four runs an innings and he took only eight wickets in his long but profoundly uneventful playing career .
9 Beside a muddy pool in a shadow-dappled patch of jungle where faint feeding tracks had finally petered out , he lowered himself onto a fallen log .
10 ‘ Why ca n't he treat me like a good-time girl , ’ wailed Babs .
11 He enveloped her in a large towel and began a vigorous and painful rubbing .
12 However , he planned you as a unique person for a unique purpose .
13 He sold himself to a local pig farmer .
14 Pitching the F1 as a ‘ super-bike ’ , he sold it at a retail price of £13,000 .
15 An owner now obtained ( in theory at least ) the same price for his land irrespective of whether he sold it to a private individual or to a public authority .
16 so he sold it in a wrong time he could have , he could have hold on to it another few months and got a lot of money for it
17 He met her at a literary dinner a couple of weeks later .
18 Upon arrival , he met us with a hefty stick he had dragged from somewhere , plonked it down , nosed it toward me and waited , tail shifting like a black snake .
19 He offers himself as a strong figure and also a young one .
20 It was not a place to which he could take Maureen MacQuillan or any woman , and only partly because he shared it with a fellow MP .
21 This seems to be true in spite of the fact that Spinoza was very much of a generation which was concerned to dissociate itself from the Greek inheritance , and indeed he represents something of a fresh injection of Jewish moral feeling into the main Christian current of Western thought .
22 he asked me for a few slices of bread which he broke into pieces and scattered over the roof .
23 He led her to a tiny table in one corner , and she resolutely ignored the fact that nearly everyone else — the place was surprisingly crowded — wore slinky and fashionable black .
24 He led her to a shady café , where small tables were set out in the shadow of some tall plane trees , whose leafy patterns fell over the white tables .
25 He led her to a waiting taxi and , as he held the door for her , for a brief instant their eyes met .
26 He did n't speak as he led her through a stone-floored hallway to a sweeping staircase .
27 He led her at a good trot through the country lanes , by Bramfield and Tattle Hill , through Thieves Lane to Hertingfordbury .
28 He led her into a large room where a floor-to-ceiling window gave out on a garden dominated by a fountain and a single curving oak , its tracery of branches lavish against the steel grey sky .
29 He led me to a long , low building .
30 Where was Um Al-Farajh , I asked him , and he led me to a large square of fir trees and pointed to the earth .
  Next page