Example sentences of "[pers pn] and he [vb mod] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 When she 's married ten years hence , she 'll compare her husband 's performance with yours and he 'll come off worse — every time .
2 I 've got a hostage with me and he ca n't stay long , he has an appointment . ’
3 I could n't give him cover because the see shield is is quite a heavy cumbers cumbersome thing and it has two handles behind it erm and they are obviously the means of holding it up and f for directing it wherever you want so I 'm holding this all the time so he ca n't pass his weapon to me and he ca n't put his weapon in my holster because my gun was in the holster .
4 If he chucks something on the ground he 'll pick it up and give it to me and he 'll do it all the more .
5 He also said that he was n't going to harm me and he would be there and that there was no sin in any of it .
6 you u u use your brain a bit more , see now if er they used to come to me , my brother was one , he 'd come to me and he 'd say , right I 've got a heavy lift , so will you come up here and sling it for me but we had to put the slings round the heavy lift , say , I say right I 'll come up and another time we had a railway carriage come down like that 'll be shipped abroad , old railway carriage .
7 He says they 're advising housing authorities to fite them and he would be concerned if that advice was ignored .
8 He 's aware of concern expressed by Parish Council and he 's going to see them and he will be very happy to come and er speak to us and answer any questions that we wish him to , so I advised him to contact the clerk to make arrangements .
9 That is rather a ponderous way of saying that no one in his right mind doubts the truth of my assertion about the states in which Bill will be found , because there are two of them and he must be in one or the other .
10 Five years with them and he must have learned an awful lot .
11 I say I 'll have a word with them and he should n't follow me .
12 But during the er strike he used to go out purposely to get them and he used to go onto these fields .
13 Whitlock had spent most of the afternoon with them and he 'd come away with the distinct impression that they held him in little regard .
14 When I was a trainee my deputy fresh foods went it with me , and like he 'd sit there and he 'd say right this is how you do it at first and then he 'd let me do some and well I 'd do them and he 'd say why have you done that and I 'd tell him and then he 'd let me do it
15 There were things the men never spoke of to Angie ; and she had known instinctively that Eric 's job was something she and he would never openly discuss .
16 Later , when her son was finished with his learning , she and he might make their way to Corporation Park , where they could stroll through the gardens and enjoy the sunshine of a beautiful July afternoon .
17 Because I did choose him , Chips , and quite deliberately , whatever you and he may think . ’
18 ‘ Your dad 's very proud of you and he 'll think you 're really clever , making a tree-house . ’
19 Hugh was scathing about any form of non-structuralist criticism , particularly if it came from a feminist — I should have thought you and he would have had absolutely nothing in common .
20 However , if you and he can overcome the early period and settle back into regular work routines , it is a vital part of his full recovery .
21 the organ there was a you know where you put your pump belt , there was a long stout piece of wood and you had to keep pumping that up and down to put the wind into the organ , and there was a mirror above the organ and Mr the org the organist , who was a butcher in Street , he could look into that mirror and see whether you was pumping fast enough and he could signal to you and he used to warn you to er keep your eye on the mirror and if he , if he wanted more wind he used to be up up up oh or , but it was just a big long of wood and we used to pull it up and down , I was fairly tall for me height a age , but er we used to have to stand on a box to get it going first , but it , it was just like bellows for your fire you know , wind for that , and we used to pump the wind into the organ also the service .
22 Well I had learnt shorthand and typing at school but erm the money was necessary at home you see , and er with my sister working there , at H and T Hornes , er she spoke for me and er I had an interview and and they put me up in the nursery , we used to call it the nursery see because we were all fourteens up there and er then they called it the cylinder shop and er my foreman was a fella name Archie and erm everything was very very strict indeed , we could not move away from our board you could n't speak to the next one that was working by you , and er there was a fella named Mr and he was he , I did n't work for him I worked for Mr , but some you cou you were afraid to move because of this man and he he he 'd stare at you and he 'd look at you and anyway erm they put me assembling and it was very interesting indeed , there was a tall stand on , we called it the bench , a tall stand with a screw on the top and then to as begin to assemble the locks you had to take what we would call the body , screw it into the er little on the stand and then we had tweezers , there were , in the body there were five springs and then you had to have five breast pins and when you got the springs in you .. we have to have a plug at the back so as we could put each pin and push the plug over that a dummy plug we called it and so that was five pins were in and then there was a ball er when that , when we came to put it in our vice , we had to put the V I C E not V O voice .
23 ‘ He will like you and he will need you for you speak English and he speaks no Italian and not even his brother will be able to speak to him at first . ’
24 If he explains to the court why the debt has n't been paid , you and he will be given a date for the case to be heard .
25 And you and he will win this day for us , ’ Thorfinn said .
26 If he wants to get or to keep his employment , he has to sign the document which the employer puts before him and he may do so without fully appreciating what it may involve .
27 ‘ The horse seems to have improved since we put blinkers on him and he 'll wear them at Ayr .
28 Then smile at him and he 'll forget to ask anything else . "
29 You just want to put your hand on him and he 'll start to quiver — afraid you 're going to back him .
30 ‘ It will be slipped round him and he 'll burn all the quicker . ’
  Next page