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

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1 It is some five years since I worked with Mr Edell in his previous incarnation as a lawyer , but he struck me as a man who would do the necessary .
2 Adorno , we have seen , acknowledges this specificity — indeed , for him it explains the ( unfulfilled ) potential of jazz and the hangovers of ‘ real ’ creativity in some Tin Pan Alley songs ; but he subsumes it into a theory of ‘ false individualization ’ , designed , in his view , to disguise mass cultural production as ‘ art ’ .
3 He had not seen the kings but he told her of the baby who was born to be King in a nearby village called Bethlehem .
4 But he told me of a new home just completed , where Aunt Louise had been offered a place .
5 But he told them in a straightforward way .
6 But he had her between a rock and a hard place , and the look in his eyes told her only too clearly that he knew it .
7 No I thought , cos I , I remember reading erm I think it 's her father who owns one of the bookshops in Woodbridge and he had this book on display , you know he sort of erm advertised it if you like and it 's , it 's properly published and everything but he had it as a a book available in his store and there was an advert in the Anglian about it , and I remember reading that she said er that he said er cos it was his daughter who had the child , that it totally knocked them for six .
8 He was a short , precise man with a small moustache which reminded me a little of Hitler 's , but he had none of the German leader 's belligerence .
9 But he had none of the grandiloquence of Vasco Núñez ; he uttered none of the proud formulae Balboa had uttered in the Gulf of San Migud .
10 He had , of course , known those grandparents whose glamour made Alexandra 's existence so difficult , but he saw them in a light so different from his wife 's that they seemed hardly the same people .
11 But he knew nothing of the Pacific 's tides .
12 But he knew nothing of the practical techniques of modelling and carving .
13 But he acquired it as an onlooker .
14 She tried to embrace him , but he seized her by the arms and shook her till her teeth chattered .
15 It came apart in his arms , but he bundled it onto the bed .
16 But he treated me like a little girl ; part of his training , I suppose . ’
17 In The New York Times , Vincent Canby thought McQueen was ‘ as all-American as a Rover Boy ’ and Hoffman was ‘ not especially convincing ’ , but he enjoyed it as the sort of ‘ escapist movie we used to go see on Saturday night without even bothering to read the marquee ’ .
18 The backbone of his work is the new recitative but he uses it with a power quite beyond Peri 's so that it is not merely ‘ expressive ’ but when necessary , as in Orfeo 's lament in Act II , heart-breaking .
19 Mr Llambias ' services do not come cheap — they are a combination of a retainer ‘ sufficient to make them think really seriously ’ and a success fee that is a percentage of the fee income of the smaller firm ( sometimes 5% or 7.5% ) — but he prides himself on the longevity of the mergers he arranges .
20 It was smooth and round but he carried it like a sack .
21 I pulled him away and tried to get him upstairs in case he was traumatized for life , but he kicked me in the balls .
22 His Irish wife , Aylish O'Flaherty , ran off with their son , whom she feared would be raised as a heretic ; this was enough , by the statutes of the time , to have the marriage dissolved and the boy dispossessed ; but he distinguished himself in the Civil War , raising a troop of horse for the royalists , while the castle was occupied by Cromwellian troops .
23 Yeah , yeah was kind , it was kind of them , yes and we went all round the shops and er I thoroughly enjoyed it and in the new Co-Op as well you know , I thoroughly enjoyed it but he took me in the car so that we did n't have to hang about you see
24 She did not provide him with wine , to be sure , but he took it in the caffè he frequented , a caffè where politics were argued over far into the night and the arguers fell asleep at the table .
25 The students followed but he threatened them with a knife before running off .
26 After several hours Matron managed to calm him down but he left her in a terrible mood .
27 I had built him up to play it right to the heart of the green but he played it like a nervous three handicapper .
28 Mr Richardson said : ‘ His mother tried to bar him from using the telephone but he connected himself to the line by running a piece of wire under the carpet and soldering it to the telephone terminal . ’
29 He acknowledged the dog 's overtures , but he eyed her with a good deal of concern .
30 The January price rises [ see p. 38730-31 ] had been higher than expected and painful , but he described them as the logical conclusions of the policies of Soviet Prime Ministers Nikolai Ryzhkov and Valentin Pavlov .
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