Example sentences of "[subord] i [vb base] he " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ E's my brother an' where I go 'e goes , ’ I replied defiantly . |
2 | ‘ Where I hope he will reflect on the unwisdom of employing his charm and duplicity on a woman as sharp as I. ’ |
3 | He likes these contacts with the more substantial world and happily hurries off in the direction of his stationery shop and fax bureau , where I know he will encounter many difficulties . |
4 | Jim was elected to Portsmouth city council in nineteen seventy six as a member for where I understand he tried to play football occasionally until nineteen eighty six . |
5 | Peggy ’ — he put his hand out towards her — ‘ I 've got him where I want him , where we all want him . |
6 | Where I find him occasionally disappointing is in the dreamier world of the Gymnopédies and the more intriguing Sonneries de la Rose Croix ( one of the composer 's Rosicrucian works ) . |
7 | ‘ He 's not easy to describe , although I remember him perfectly . |
8 | Although I remember him stepping out of them and the sight of his white pants , I felt it was not seemly to observe too closely : otherwise I should have been able to verify the assertion that his underclothes were American but the rest very English . |
9 | He thinks nothing of staying up till two or three o'clock in the morning in casinos , although I tell him it 's very , very bad for one 's constitution to have irregular hours . |
10 | If he 's never been particularly affectionate and you 've never complained before , he may find your sudden demands puzzling and irritating , although I hope he realises that you 're anxious to improve things for the sake of the marriage and not just for yourself . |
11 | Mr Bill Dixon Smith ( Tory ) used to be a near neighbour until recently , but although I understand he is still in the area I have no idea if he still takes an active part in the council elections . |
12 | I was not dilating and my husband said , ‘ Perhaps you 're not very tolerant of pain ’ which made me feel awful although I realise he meant it kindly . |
13 | I have every faith in him although I realise he does n't know everything . |
14 | ‘ No , it is n't Matthew , although I pray he made the right decision . ’ |
15 | We were up on the top floor and Ralph Horton came up to listen to us and was impressed , although I think he was more impressed with David than us . |
16 | The originator of the tapes has clearly decided to make his tape deck pay for itself ( although I think he could take a few hints on how to eliminate unwanted hum and noise ) and the result can only be described as a rip off . |
17 | I laughed sometimes when he chased intruders from the garden , but I wished he had n't been aware of the little cat , although I think he only wanted to frighten it away , not kill it . |
18 | I 'm a little bit surprised Stone has n't tried to get a bit closer to him although I think he 's been given the job of tracking Agnew who 's more of an attacking midfield player . |
19 | I took this seriously , although I suspect he said it just to make the others laugh . |
20 | ‘ Yes , I can actually , although I suspect he 's only after one thing . ’ |
21 | ‘ Although I suppose he might suspect her of fancying me ! |
22 | ‘ But , without a faction behind him , he is n't much danger , although I suppose he could combine in time with a cousin or two . |
23 | I fundamentally disagree with his proposition , although I congratulate him on the stand that he has taken for his principles . |
24 | And although I believe he was referring to a certain kind of abstract thinking — the kind that reduced the English Hegelian tradition to a lyrical hymn to the Absolute , and of which his own thesis on Bradley of 1916 came very near to imitating ( which is why he declared , on its publication in 1963 , that he did not pretend to understand it ) , he possessed an outstanding capacity for reasoned argument . |
25 | He has only been a reserve for Wales all season , although I believe he has been playing very well for his club . |
26 | He needs me more than I need him . |
27 | ‘ I do n't believe Maurin would have killed her any more than I think he killed Sabine Jourdain . ’ |
28 | He says he is n't , so I ask him if I can caddie for him . |
29 | I am grateful to my hon. Friend for his intervention — although anything that the Government nationalise they may flog off at a profit at a later date , so I ask him to keep an eye on the situation . |
30 | But once I 'd given them to him I never saw them again so I imagine he must have burnt them . |