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

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1 He may presumably take into account his previous experience of the particular applicants , if they have organised marches in the past .
2 But the judge added : ‘ The time has come when Mr Davies has to realise that if the caravans are not removed from the site he may well go to prison , because he will be in contempt of the court order . ’
3 He may well go into shock and take a few months to accept the inevitability of family life .
4 He may well ask for space for himself , but always space in relation to another .
5 THE FORMER Western Isles depute finance director has started a court action to challenge a recommendation that he should personally pay over cash lost following the collapse of the Bank of Credit and Commerce International .
6 The Court of Appeal held that as the main purpose of Mr Stark 's contract had merely been the regular and efficient distribution of newspapers and since there was no evidence he should personally engage in distribution , it followed that the contract was not a ‘ contract personally to execute any work or labour ’ and therefore Mrs Gunning was not employed under such a contract .
7 His employers , confident of his loyalty , tell him that he should always go to lunch to see what the rivals are offering .
8 In some councils , the pressures of party political control may be very considerable , but even so , he should always bear in mind this overall responsibility .
9 He has been in hospital since November , but has been told he must shortly return to prison ( see Replies , this page ) .
10 A solicitor will generally be free to decide for himself whether or not to accept instructions from a client , though he must always bear in mind the statutory obligation not to discriminate against potential clients on the grounds of race , colour , sex etc ( see Chapter 3 ) and he must refuse to act or to continue to act in any of the following circumstances : ( 1 ) where his client seeks to insist on the solicitor conducting his case in a way which would involve some breach of law or professional regulation ; ( 2 ) where the client 's affairs are outside his professional competence ; ( 3 ) if he suspects that the instructions purporting to come from his client do not in fact represent the client 's wishes ; ( 4 ) where the solicitor is unable to obtain confirmation from the client of instructions received from a third person ; ( 5 ) where there is or is likely to be some conflict of interest involving the solicitor himself , his client , other clients ( present , past or prospective ) , or the firm ; ( 6 ) where the solicitor may be a material and not merely formal witness in any proceedings ; ( 7 ) where another solicitor has already received instructions which have not been formally withdrawn .
11 ‘ I expect he 'll just weep for joy when I tell him , ’ she said .
12 and when they brought , they 'd come about quarter , tea time I think and they said Benjamin 's tired , he 'll probably go to sleep
13 He 'll probably go to ground .
14 He 'll probably cuss like hell , ’ Yanto thought to himself , but when the Devil drives … .
15 Though he 'll probably come by rail ( ‘ gricer ’ [ UU ] train spotter ) Mr Hutchings is particularly interested in the Northern League 's unique ‘ ground hoppers weekend , ’ mentioned here a fortnight back .
16 She said , oh , he 'll probably get in touch with us .
17 He might simply view as collusion what Huy saw as loyalty .
18 Martin Woodcock 's paintings of all known cotingas are generously proportioned and The Cotingas is an inspiration to any adventurous ornithologist looking for areas of study where he might still contribute to science by straightforward observation .
19 She glanced at him in quick surprise , wondering what sort of favour he could possibly have in mind .
20 He could always claim of course that he knew nothing of the layout of the engine-room and had always assumed that there had to be a reserve tank or that in a panic-stricken concern for the welfare of his beloved niece he had quite forgotten that there was no such tank .
21 Manager Graeme Souness 's touchline ban meant he could only watch in anguish from the directors ' box .
22 A general in the regular army , he could only serve as lieutenant-colonel of the Sussex militia .
23 The problem with Orwell is that he could only think of class conflict in terms of major insurrectionary conflict .
24 Freud 's he just could n't speak Hebrew , he could only speak in Egyptian and so on and so on .
25 His heart contracted and the thought struck him that this domestic scene encompassed all he could ever want of life .
26 He could hardly wait for dinner-time when he would have the chance to speak to Evelyn .
27 Ah , he 'd rather work at home
28 He 'd probably drool with excitement , even though he drove a perfectly respectable BMW …
29 An Arsenal player could be the genetically engineered bastard son of a dangerous liaison between Luke Perry and Paul Newman circa 1960 and yet he 'd still look like Pee Wee Herman in his pyjamas if he was playing away .
30 An Arsenal player could be the genetically engineered bastard son of a dangerous liaison between Luke Perry and Paul Newman circa 1966 and he 'd still look like Pee Wee Herman in his pyjamas if he was playing away
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