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

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1 ‘ Oh God , ’ he whispered as he stared at his captors , his eyes bulging madly .
2 ‘ I 'll go to Liverpool , ’ he whispered as he hobbled up the stairs , ‘ and I shall outbid all of them . ’
3 He also sent his brother a sketch of the little church at Turnham Green — together with a sketch of another church at Petersham — and he records that he returned to Turnham Green on a number of occasions subsequently .
4 He goes and he goes if you live in New York we 'll take you to the erm he said then we 'll we 'll let you fly around the city for a while !
5 And he goes and he goes to his brother what 's the , what 's the third letter of the alphabet ?
6 Far , far he goes until he goes under the sea .
7 With an increase of bland courtesy he insists that she stay in the car while he talks to the girl behind the Reception desk .
8 But he insists that it follows from it and others of the same kind that knowledge is impossible .
9 He argued that they consisted of a material substance , the ‘ germ plasm ’ , which transmitted characters from parents to offspring via the nucleus of the egg and sperm cells .
10 well he has I mean er my my daughter-in-law said he takes he mu he very often drives he 's got a season ticket , an annual season ticket t er to take the train but more often than not he drives because he gets into the into London at about quarter to seven in the morning he goes and you know , parks the car and then goes and gets breakfast and she says he always takes at least one shirt in the car with him to change into .
11 He recommended that I go to a hospital and see a psychiatrist .
12 Credit for forcing a decision on this issue goes to Rudi Fuchs , director of the Gemeentemuseum in The Hague , who caused a fierce public discussion when he announced that he wanted to deaccession two Picassos in his collection in order to create a fund with which he could supplement his annual acquisitions budget and concentrate more on collecting contemporary art ( see The Art Newspaper , No. 14 , January 1992 , p. 3 ) .
13 ‘ Where did you stay last night ? ’ he asked while we waited for the cameras to be set up .
14 ‘ Are you on any medication at all ? ’ he asked as we returned to the surgery .
15 ‘ Are you enjoying your new job ? ’ he asked as they waited for their order to be filled .
16 ‘ Are you all right , Leonora ? ’ he asked as they strolled along the gravelled paths .
17 ‘ Are you searching for anything in particular ? ’ he asked as she stood by a cage containing some little creatures curled up fast asleep .
18 ‘ How much exactly do you need to know , Sister ? ’ he asked as he came into her office and sat down .
19 His medical went well until he revealed that he suffered from asthma and David pointed out to him that he would never cope with that particular job .
20 He looks like I feel on a very bad morning .
21 Miss Groundwater — he found that he thought of her in this way again , as a fillip to rage — was seated at her mirror , already in her nightgown , brushing out her hair .
22 When he tried to swallow the lump in his throat he found that it tasted of beck-water .
23 However , Honderich himself throws up difficulties with regard to his third point , in that Conservatism must have been at least partly responsible for the ‘ decent ’ society he found when he arrived in Britain thirty years ago .
24 He exaggerates when he speaks of a ‘ deafening silence , from historians on the land question , but he makes a strong case for placing the land issue near the centre of any sound historical analysis of the period .
25 The allegation had been spoken so quietly that he doubted whether she had in fact heard it .
26 and er , it was gone eleven I would of thought , anyway he stopped and I slept like a log , got up at twenty past six , but erm , it 's a strange thing because one of those came last evening and it parked outside George 's , now I said yesterday , when Alan goes to work , it 's not long after six normally to go up to London and that
27 So he stopped and he listened to this and went to have a look , see what was going on .
28 He accepts that it has to be traded off against the 25 per cent improvement in fuel consumption and longer engine life .
29 ‘ Touch nothing ’ , he shouted as he sped towards the police station .
30 ‘ Wotcher ! ’ he shouted as he scraped on the strings .
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