Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] him from the " in BNC.

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1 And Dr Carrington had particularly asked me to disconnect him from the ventilator .
2 I phoned him from the training ground yesterday and had a row with him because it was embarrassing for Barnet .
3 I released him from the tomb .
4 Come and clean my windows and I owed him from the last time .
5 I collected him from the airport and he scarcely drew breath !
6 He looked at Bernard , frowned , then glanced round sharply when he heard someone calling him from the end of the counter .
7 Leslie did not want me to go with him to the station , and so I watched him from the hotel-room window , his jaunty walk bravely exaggerated .
8 He told me about Midge when he got back to London and I called him from the shop one Saturday , telling him we 'd be interested in him as a singer .
9 No , I knew him from the school .
10 I collect him from the swimming pool .
11 When Nigel came back he lay down on his stomach and held out a big stick which the Mayor clutched and Otley and I pushed him from the back until we got him out none the worse for his adventure .
12 I recognized him from the wedding photograph old Ma Scamp had flashed in front of me .
13 If he was thus eligible for that title , there must have been something which qualified him — something which distinguished him from the numerous other leaders , both military and political , who at the time were themselves becoming thorns in the Roman side .
14 Having got this far , he allowed himself another minute or so before confronting the thousand-day journey which separated him from the bathroom .
15 He had clipped up his shirtsleeves with steel bracelets above the elbow and was swathed in a coarse apron which had once been white and which covered him from the knot of his tie to his ankles .
16 O'Neill denies using abusive language to referee Eddy Green , who dismissed him from the dugout during a win over Northwich on March 24 .
17 He was saved by another servant who recognised him from the banquet .
18 She was still shaking her head from side to side and laughing softly when she shooed him from the kitchen and returned her attention to her magazine .
19 When it came to electing a successor to the deposed Archbishop Fitzherbert at Richmond ( North Riding ) on 24 July 1147 , Bishop William opted for Henry Murdac [ q.v. ] , favourite of the Yorkshire reformers , against King Stephen 's candidate ; presumably it was Murdac who released him from the suspension he incurred for failing to attend the Council of Reims in March 1148 .
20 She released him from the leather strap then ran next door to call the police .
21 She followed him from the dining-room , and Ernest shut the kitchen door .
22 He said it lightly but as she followed him from the staff-room she was aware that her heart had begun to beat very fast .
23 Numbly she followed him from the dance floor , barely even noticing when some of the dancers called out to her in passing .
24 She followed him from the room , along the gallery and down the stairs to the library , where Nicolo turned to her abruptly .
25 Firemen who pulled him from the inferno looked on anxiously as off-duty technician James McDonald tried to revive him .
26 In the small mezzanine ‘ A ’ -Control Room stood the producer , his eye on the second-hand of the wall-clock and his right hand raised to signal the start to the conductor who watched him from the studio .
27 ‘ I mean , how can you bar him from the Club if you do n't know who it is , then ? ’
28 ‘ Oh , I think we can do better than that this time , ’ she told him , as she steered him from the sitting-room and along the hall and into Sebastian 's bedroom .
29 . Thought better by Jewry itself to withdraw him from the public gaze .
30 He saved too the note she sent requesting ‘ Big choc. cake , ginger biscuits , Twiglets ’ just as he has kept the clipping she sent him from the Daily Telegraph about academic failures who become gifted and successful later in life .
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