Example sentences of "[verb] [coord] he [adv] " in BNC.

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1 Baker is the man he is trying to displace and he already has 306,209 points .
2 Baker is the man he is trying to displace and he already has 306,209 points .
3 He has often told friends he would like to write and he obviously has the creativity that could be adapted to another form of expression .
4 My gun jammed and William recognised me and came forward laughing and firing shot after shot at me while I waved and tried to duck and these yellow paint balls went splat , splat , thunking into my hired camouflage trousers and combat jacket and smacking into my visored helmet while I waved at him and tried to get the damn gun to work and he just walked forward slowly shooting me ; bastard had his own paint gun and he 'd probably had it souped up ; knowing William , that was almost inevitable .
5 It was quite still for the breeze had dropped and he vaguely registered that the women seemed to have gone .
6 His hands trembled and he constantly looked to Louise for advice and support .
7 He knew his mother was dying and he either could n't or would n't go to see her .
8 And he 'd got a boy who did stutter and he always used to go to granddad before er he when he came to school , before lessons and he 'd give him this pebble and he 'd say , now you can put it in your pocket .
9 The designer who today shows so little emotion was devastated and he still keeps a mural of revered fashion figures ( Mary Quant and Vivienne Westwood are two of his heroines ) with Galeotti at the centre situated behind the enormous , clutter-free desk that 's one more powerful statement .
10 The lights went yellow as he approached but he just managed to squeeze through , to a chorus of horn blasts .
11 Very great odium T. Poole incurred by bringing me here … when Wordsworth came & he likewise by T. Poole 's agency settled here — You can not conceive the tumult , calumnies , & apparatus of threatened persecutions which this event has occasioned round about us .
12 However , unknown to Lee , under his ball were bramble runners , so that when he came down to it , his hand got turned and he only moved the ball a few inches .
13 ‘ You 're not going to give me his name , either , no doubt , because he told you something he should n't have done and he probably did it because you paid him for it . ’
14 And as both his hands moved and he gently cupped her breasts in his warm hold as though each were infinitely precious , a sigh of bliss , of need left her .
15 He came and he just slashed the railways you see .
16 At last when the man 's legs were freed and he too was carried out to the waiting ambulance , Rachel stood up and flexed her cramped muscles .
17 Sixth , the employer 's will to resist trade union demands is weakened and he therefore ‘ settles closer to the union 's minimum acceptable increase than to his own maximum acceptable offer ’ .
18 The details to be included in the public registers to be established under the bill had yet to be decided but he personally favoured ‘ more information rather than less . ’
19 He watched the vicar 's face waiting for the thunderous ‘ thou shalt be cast into the eternal fires ’ glare but he only smiled and shook her hand .
20 That 's basically for editing purposes , so that , if the editor , he likes the general tenor of what you 've said but he perhaps wants to , he wants to chop a little bit out or he wants to put that sentence up there , he 's got somewhere that he can actually , he can actually do his editing .
21 It was only after a passionate entreaty by his relative Lady Frances Wingfield , who lived in St. Martin 's , that Cromwell relented and he later presented the widowed countess of Burghley with a portrait of himself .
22 Erm occupation when you , you were talking about travel when , he 'd told you what he was doing and he was associated with an American company or the parent company was in America erm you mentioned about travel , Steve started talking about car and miles he drives and he also mentioned flying but you never explored at all really the , the flying side .
23 Ironically , fate intervened and he never did make that his career , which is probably just as well , since when he was given the task many years later of steering British Aerospace into the private sector he crossed swords with more than a few civil servants and did n't have a lot of time for them .
24 And we just , he knew a lot of the , he was interested in si singing and he just knew the words and and just sang round about the house .
25 From the beginning , I never asked and he never said .
26 On 30 June 1921 these elements coalesced and he suddenly saw that familiar landscape with new eyes .
27 Well Tony , was who manager at the associated now , er he was very a very popular player , he was a goal scorer on one occasion , they played an away match at Swindon and he scored a goal and the goalkeeper got sent off a John so Tony went in goal and he saved a penalty later in the match , but he was a very popular player he was a a good goal scorer then there was Colin he , he had one of the hardest shots in the league you know , I 've , I 've seen the goalkeeper shrug his shoulders at , at defenders and say well how do you stop those , they used to call him Cannonball at one time , and er there was Tommy he had his collarbone broken and he never played again after , but he was a great centre forward he used to make a lot of space for the other forwards you know .
28 His parent did not force him to attend and he now feels this might have brought scorn from other members of the community .
29 Perhaps he had forgotten that the bell would ring or he hardly cared whether it rang or not .
30 ‘ All the facts seemed to fit and he even looks like Ben .
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