Example sentences of "he [verb] [pron] to [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Gina forced him to staple it to the living-room wall behind the settee and opposite the television .
2 I might just as well ask him to drive me to the nearest station .
3 Berger said : ‘ He made it to the first corner ahead of me and I tried to hang on .
4 In competition with 800 other boys , he made it to the last five , but nerves got the better of him during a final audition at the Criterion Theatre , in London 's West End .
5 His ‘ act as if you own the place ’ approach seemed to work , and he made it to the double doors that opened into the main tunnel complex , not even pausing as he attached a circuit board to a second brick and casually tossed it into the heart of the pile of drums on the dock nearby .
6 Three days after receiving the inspectors report , he passed it to the Serious Fraud Office for further investigation .
7 He sold himself to a local pig farmer .
8 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 .
9 After this but before the rogue was traced , the rogue took the car along to a market in Warren Street ( where dealers commonly sold cars ) and he sold it to an innocent purchaser .
10 He sold it to an American bookseller , who broke up the historic volumes that had survived the hazards of more than six centuries .
11 The star lot , Holbein 's Lady with a Squirrel , was withdrawn two weeks ago by Lord Cholmondeley , when he sold it to the National Gallery for £10 million .
12 George Hurst , the son of a curate , was born in 1800 and was apprenticed to a silk mercer at the age of 13 , at the end of which time he applied himself to an energetic programme of self-improvement and became a schoolteacher .
13 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 .
14 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 .
15 He led her to a waiting taxi and , as he held the door for her , for a brief instant their eyes met .
16 He led her to the far room where she had found Leo .
17 He led her to the last desk in the line , on which she could see a sheaf of pink sheets of paper .
18 Placing a hand on her shoulder , he led her to an ornate , gilded mirror hanging above the carved stone fireplace .
19 He led me to a long , low building .
20 Where was Um Al-Farajh , I asked him , and he led me to a large square of fir trees and pointed to the earth .
21 He led me to a large , upright scallop of rock .
22 To and fro from Sydney to Parramatta he devoted himself to the spiritual and physical welfare of the convicts .
23 He devoted himself to the poor of Leicester .
24 His undoubted talents never blossomed in public life , and he devoted himself to an immense rebuilding and renovation programme at Chatsworth House , Derbyshire , where he loved to spend many hours in the library .
25 Unsatisfied , he helped himself to an old issue of Penthouse ( his brother , a window cleaner , had kept every issue of the magazine ) and , turning the pages at random , discovered Amaranth Wilikins spread languorously over three of them .
26 He helped them to a waiting car and drove to nearby St Thomas 's Hospital .
27 After making each man check that his own line was securely attached , he moved them to the far end of the cage and sat them down on the wooden bench .
28 Holding it up , he shouts something to the two Tibetans by the fire .
29 He held his last press conference in 1955 , but no more than in 1946 did he resign himself to a permanent retirement .
30 He referred me to the first of several psychiatrists I was to visit for a year .
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