Example sentences of "[conj] [pron] [verb] he at " in BNC.

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1 One officer suggested behind his hand that I visit him at his home after work , and in exchange for this little attention he would write me a six-month permis de séjour .
2 He sounded so sincere that I forgave him at once in my heart .
3 When I came to Macmillan , it was with the greatest difficulty that I telephoned him at all .
4 Ronni smiled a small smile , grateful that the subject of Jeff and Silvia had been left behind , and enjoying , for once , the fact that she had him at a disadvantage .
5 If it was true what he said , that she kept him at arm 's length , surely there could only be one reason for that ?
6 Phyl would have stayed in show business without the help of Littler but she was fortunate in that she met him at the right time , when he was building up his pantomime empire .
7 ‘ You wrote that you caught him at his flat just at the time he was leaving the country . ’
8 So many of you enjoy Dr. D 's column ( we have taken an extract from his latest book this month , page 176 ) that we photographed him at home with his new wife , TV presenter and novelist , Christine Webber , page 8 .
9 Then , in 1964 he won the Masters again and everyone expected him at St Andrews for the Open Championship .
10 I had what I refer to as the Flower Gentleman come to call on me — I 'm terrible at remembering names — and I liked him at once .
11 I began to think that I had found a friend , and I answered him at once .
12 When Callahan and I visited him at his large house on Sunset Beach , it was like walking around a graveyard : every board was a headstone with memories buried beneath it .
13 And you hounded him at work , wanting his attention all the time like a spoilt child .
14 There 's no more dangerous animal in the jungle if you surprise him at close quarters . "
15 He 's a natural competitor , he even beats you up if you beat him at cards . ’
16 It 's rose pruning time says Brian and he will call and do the necessary if you contact him at the Glendale Club on 091–584–1148 .
17 well he bought the land and we saw him at different times build his bungalow it 's a lovely bungalow now int it ?
18 If we pay him at time and three quarters which is the most we can pay him , we 're still making point six of a er on top of that .
19 One of the conspirators would ring the foreman to tip him off that the shop steward could be caught red-handed stealing company property if they searched him at the gate .
20 Few months down the line , and he sells him at a loss .
21 Jacob 's taking advantage of his father 's blindness and frailty , and his deceiving him at one of the most solemn moments of his life , are reminiscent of the shame and humiliation brought to Noah by his son Ham .
22 I do n't think he meant it , looking back , but I believed him at the time .
23 He 'd survived where they had eliminated some of his followers because they took him at his own estimation , a man of the cloth .
24 The couple met while on holiday in Greece in 1987 and married after she joined him at his base in South Dakota .
25 It was strange , the conversation Dad and I had , because when I saw him at home later and over the next few days he behaved as if it had never happened , as if he had n't told me he 'd fallen in love with someone else .
26 The question in Hunt 's mind , when I saw him at the beginning of the 1976 season , was whether changing teams and style was going to make a substantial difference in his way of life : in his informality , his private life , his sense of his own personal liberty .
27 When I met him at Wentworth earlier this week he called for a peaceful Ryder Cup match against the Americans at The Belfry in September .
28 ‘ My name is Lockwood , ’ I said , when I met him at the gate to his house .
29 When trying to guess where someone went when I missed him at the airport I do not imagine his thoughts , I try to imagine his situation as someone like him would see it , and think ; if he tells me he has just learned he has cancer I may hear in imagination the doctor 's grave voice , but I do not imagine the fear , I feel the chill of it ; if I see him cut his finger I do not imagine the pain as something objective before my ‘ mind 's eye ’ , either I look on as though the knife were cutting through cheese or I incipiently wince .
30 Did you report him when you spotted him at Rotherhithe ? ’
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