Example sentences of "he [vb mod] [adv] [verb] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 In the latter case his learning will be less available for transfer to other situations ; he may also learn faulty language habits .
2 As he leads them about , he may well meet another male who also has an attendant troop of young .
3 However , he will always know that his performance on a simulator is being assessed and , except for the business of risks , he may well take more care than he would in a real plant .
4 A similar result may be achieved if the practitioner is able to use the cash accounting scheme , although he may thereby defer any input recovery if he does not pay his suppliers promptly .
5 ‘ A witness may be cross-examined as to previous statements made by him in writing or reduced into writing relative to the subject matter of the indictment or proceeding , without such writing being shown to him ; but if it is intended to contradict such witness by the writing , his attention must , before such contradictory proof can be given , be called to those parts of the writing which are to be used for the purpose of so contradicting him : provided always , that it shall be competent for the judge at any time during the trial , to require the production of the writing for his inspection , and he may thereupon make such use of it for the purpose of the trial as he may think fit .
6 Gould received an official apology from West Midlands police yesterday over their part in the decision to force him to stay away from the Cup replay , but he may still take legal action .
7 bases on which he arrives at a decision that he may sometimes find considerable difficulty in making a good case on paper for some action he may have taken , even though he feels , and subsequent events may prove , that action to have been perfectly correct .
8 So , at the point when the meditator ends in prayer that he may always keep this passion in mind , he presents to himself an image which might easily coincide with that on a rood-screen , or painted panel .
9 He should never have another dog .
10 He had never had a dog and now that one of his daughters was married and the other a student at drama school , he saw no reason why he should ever give one house-room .
11 Leaving aside for the time being the question of ‘ hostile intent , ’ it is plain that it is not enough that the defendant deliberately does an act that has the incidental effect of obstructing the police ; he must also have some notion that he is obstructing and causing the police difficulties .
12 He must not only distinguish behaviour from ideology , he must also take careful note of just how they are interrelated .
13 In the circumstances , he must already have sufficient evidence to enable him to proceed by way of summons , and could also arrest if the general arrest conditions of PACE are satisfied .
14 A scientist may have an effect on behaviour in the act of observing or analysing it , and he must certainly take this effect into account .
15 This means he must still work full time in a technical or managerial capacity for the company , but need no longer be a director .
16 ‘ Then he 'll surely expect some sort of explanation from me , ’ Harry said quietly .
17 he 'll probably sleep all night see , see if he does
18 He 'll probably go straight back down !
19 If he comes to court , what happened at the police station does n't matter because he 'll then give direct evidence , not what he said in the police station but what actually happened on that night in the , in the estate .
20 He 'll bloody come next week .
21 Churchill knows he 'll never win this war , but he ca n't give it up !
22 It 's hoped he 'll have the bandage removed in 2 to 3 weeks , but it 's unlikely that he 'll ever recover full use of his injured leg .
23 But he 's got no idea whether he 'll ever get any money .
24 Though he might well marry another woman , he was hers , she thought intensely .
25 So , for example , if the Director General of Fair Trading was considering whether or not a lender 's use of a persuasive clause such as that suggested on page 39 constituted fair trading practice , we think that he might well recommend that use of such a clause should be conditional on use of the industry-wide non-profit insurance scheme .
26 He 's a good guide as to how to behave during barren times and , while I accept their temperaments are chalk and cheese , he might just talk some sense into Wright .
27 If he pacifies him skilfully enough , he might even make another sale on his colleague 's behalf .
28 well that 's right , in fact he might even need more sand
29 By publicly opposing the recourse to a notorious Vichyite , he could also crystallize pro-Gaullist feeling within the French Resistance .
30 I suggest to my hon. Friend the Minister that he could simply delete that line of clause 60 .
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