Example sentences of "[pron] be [noun] he " in BNC.

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1 I 'm Billy he 's Bobby , no I 'm Bobby he 's Billy .
2 I 'm Billy he 's Bobby , no I 'm Bobby he 's Billy .
3 I 'm doubtfull he 's but unfitt for anything requires attendance ’ .
4 ‘ From what you 've told me , I do n't think we 'll see her for a long time unless your Mr Wyatt finds them , and while he thinks you are Dana he wo n't be looking very hard , will he ? ’
5 So he always remembers the time he went to this He 's no idea who 's funeral he was at but he just went along and then he was taken to see the family .
6 There are others he did n't buy and wants to unload , like Tony Cottee who cost £2.2m , but they 're on such big contracts other clubs ca n't afford their wages .
7 ‘ Paysage d'Harfleur ’ , dated 1900 , reveals his debt to the Impressionists , and there are works he painted on first arriving in Paris , after ten years spent at Le Havre with Dufy and Friesz .
8 But there are things he does not know , and the knowledge will somewhat better a case which even so is still black enough .
9 ‘ But there are things he lacks .
10 Newsweek , available on news stands on Monday , excerpted parts of hostage Terry Anderson 's book ‘ Den of Lions : Memoirs of Seven Years ’ in which he writes : Waite ‘ can not seem to understand that there are things he does that drive the rest of us crazy . ’
11 There were rivers he visited as a child where he could sit and watch water voles every day .
12 Even while he admired Nona and loved her , there were times he wanted to say : ‘ Look , Nona , there is this thing you have to take into account between us . ’
13 There were disadvantages he had to get used to .
14 There were things he consciously noticed about people which he brought to mind long after he had ceased to watch them , but now he noted for the first time that she had very small feet — they could have belonged to the oriental he had imagined her to be through the sun haze .
15 He realised that there were things he had done ; but now he did nothing .
16 There were questions he still needed to ask and it would n't be the first time that he had taken advantage of tiredness or grief .
17 But his own reasoning was different : there were questions he wanted to ask and things he wanted to consider before it became common knowledge that MacQuillan had received a threat typed on a newsroom machine .
18 Ferenc Puskas was Major Puskas and during the 1956 uprising there were reports he had been killed .
19 No-one knew quite what he did in there but there were rumours he drank tea with his furniture and wrote furiously on the walls in a language only he understood .
20 There 's Albert he er , as though we down I expect up the other side .
21 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 .
22 There was evidence he did .
23 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 .
24 If there was trouble he 'd have to spend the rest of the day putting it down and would n't be able to get on with the arms search at all .
25 And that was The headmaster there was Mr he was .
26 I think this is clearly Miller 's main use for the character of Alfieri and he tries to make this more realistic by making Alfieri a lawyer though I do not think that this is done very well as Alfieri does not say anything which would justify him being a lawyer as all Eddie asks him are things he would have asked anyone though perhaps he asked him because he was a ‘ lawyer ’ and he respected this and knew he would get confidentiality .
27 Hess has protected them , although in theory they are people he should not even know .
28 Nevertheless , they were ones he helped to foster .
29 Maxim felt a moment of total disorientation before he realised that something must have gone badly wrong , that because she had not greeted him he must stay being Winterbotham , that because they were strangers he must make the first move .
30 If they were tiddlers he always threw them back .
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