Example sentences of "[conj] he [verb] [subord] " in BNC.
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1 | He followed this by research among the tribes of Western Australia ( 1909–13 ) , meanwhile retaining a fellowship at Trinity College , Cambridge ( 1908–14 ) and a lecturership in ethnology at the London School of Economics ( 1909–10 ) , where he taught when in England . |
2 | The Folk Park is constructed around the thatched farmhouse birthplace of Judge Thomas Mellon and the reconstructed New World farm where he lived when the family first emigrated to America . |
3 | So having got back to Egypt ( and he was being harried from one end of the Western Desert to the other by Rommel ) Boyce found himself in a caravan which was his headquarters and also where he lived when he received an order to hare back as fast as possible to El Alamein . |
4 | The monster discovered who his creator was and where he lived when he found some papers as a result he travelled to Geneva . |
5 | Er I 'm not too sure where he lives cos he just , I think he 's just new to the town but if you give him a ring erm on the 's phone number and use the |
6 | After one speech in the House of Commons , where he sat as knight of the shire for Warwickshire , Throckmorton was summoned before the king himself . |
7 | He drove from the side of the car , not from the box seat , where he sat when he drove the family . |
8 | November 1697 , will always be associated with Chiswick , although he was constantly referred to , in his day , as ‘ Mr. Hogarth of Leicester Fields ’ — the name by which Leicester Square was known at that time — as that was his business centre and where he worked before he married . |
9 | Ariel , crawled into a shelter of leaves by the sea to the west , clasped Roukoubé to her breast where he snuffled as he nursed . |
10 | In 1700 he succeeded John Seddon [ q.v. ] as master of the Sir John Johnson 's Free Writing School , where he remained until his death thirty-three years later . |
11 | In 1866 he moved to 11 Nelson Street , where he remained until his death , turning 24 Hardy Street into a private nursing home . |
12 | On 21 December 1922 he was transferred to the City of London Mental Hospital , Dartford , Kent , where he remained until his death . |
13 | But he 's got no , as far as I can see he 's got no convincing argument that democracy will do better , but that does n't matter because he thinks that the decisive criticism of enlightened despotism is that it wo n't improve the moral or intellectual well-being of the citizens , but if people are excluded from political decision making , they will have no incentive to educate themselves or morally improve themselves , or he thinks if they do , if a despot does allow for the moral improvement of the citizens , then citizens will no longer accept despotism so that despotism is in a way self-defeating here and if it one of the proper functions of government it ca n't survive . |
14 | If Mr Lightbown is set on young and weak Tory miscreants , they either crumble or he persists until they do . |
15 | Stephen was born in 1741 and may have influenced the boy Edward , although he died when his nephew was just 16 . |
16 | Although he dressed as they did and walked among them , sullen glances were all he got . |
17 | He believed Britain could absorb a ‘ significant influx ’ although he dismissed as nonsense the suggestion that all would want to come . |
18 | Although he remained as chairman of the Council of Ministers his influence waned compared to that of Brezhnev , who eventually became formal head of state in addition to party secretary . |
19 | so immediately he knew if that comes I choke , if that comes I 'm blind |
20 | That he made when |
21 | They would have to wait only very slightly more than a second between the astronaut 's 10:59:58 signal and the one that he sent when his watch read 10:59:59 , but they would have to wait forever for the 11:00 signal . |
22 | Oh yeah I mean you take now the erm , you could say nineteen twenty six bloke , I remember an old union bloke , he was on the railway and er , when they cleaned the fire out , cos he used to get all the out , and er these here firemen on cool it with a that 's when they first started to nationalize the docks and he said well , they er , he said waste that he said when nationalization come in , well there was a lot more wasted then after that . |
23 | He knew so little of women that he felt as though he had woken up to find himself halfway across a vast mountain in a blizzard without map or rope or compass . |
24 | But Bob explains that he has special personal reasons for wanting to help to express the gratitude that he felt when he was in dire trouble himself , thousands of miles from home , and was baled out by the kindness of strangers . |
25 | ‘ Mr Swinton has so much already , ’ Alexandra said , her voice almost steady , ‘ that he asked if you might have the basket for bringing me out here on Christmas night . ’ |
26 | In the novel itself , where we might expect Marmeladov to speak of solace , respite , forgetting , companionship , he grasps the paradox that he drinks because he is in search of suffering , of ‘ tears and tribulation ’ . |
27 | In this article I would like to have a look at the nuts and bolts of his style , with the emphasis being shifted to the devices that he uses as opposed to the specific parts that he plays . |
28 | Stenhouse 's notion of the ‘ teacher-as-researcher ’ grew out of his ( and others ' ) disillusionment with the R , D & D model , which began to appear mechanistic and technocratic and unlikely to enjoy the kind of teacher commitment that he saw as necessary for effective change . |
29 | Anselm told him , in only formally polite language , that he knew as well as the legate what needed to be done . |
30 | The male does not attack it but , when mounting the tiny animal , simply performs the perfectly normal neck-bite that he employs when copulating with a female . |