Example sentences of "[coord] [pron] [vb mod] [verb] him " in BNC.

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1 ( O'Neill 1919 : 75 ) ( " He dare n't come here again or I 'll make him damned sorry he did . " )
2 Can do or I 'll ring him later on .
3 I 'll die , or I 'll see him dead first ! ’
4 Accordingly I expect that either I shall find Bill at home drunk or I shall find him at home sober .
5 ‘ Will you let go , now , or you 'll kill him !
6 You can put , do brown and put colours on the top or you can do him any colour and then put any colour on top .
7 And that last er apo er citation was authorized by Dutch or you can blame him if we are n't the best .
8 And I said the thing is , she 'll pick him up off the floor or she 'll pick him up out the basket and say if you do n't give me some money for some drugs I 'll chuck him on the floor !
9 Or she might drown him in the bath or push him under a train .
10 She could put him into the scale alongside Joseph and Tarquin Poulteney-Crosse whom she believed culpable of murder , or she could give him the benefit of the doubt .
11 It is of little value to a child if he or she can express him or herself in words but is unable to write in a legible hand .
12 Made him promise never to eat again or we 'd tie him to a tombstone .
13 Or they 'll keep him in London .
14 Should there be any emergency he was to phone Dockhead police station , or they would phone him if they had reason to call .
15 The natives insisted he burn the book or they would attack him .
16 He dare n't go back or they would see him .
17 They told him to shut up or they 'd kill him
18 Or he could stop him .
19 who or what would upset him ?
20 who or what would please him ?
21 is it , ah , they used to be su , according to everyone he was such a so and so , he er , he 's , he used to be barmy , he was like the clo , close barmy man and he used to like chase people around with bricks and stuff and everyone used to hate him and like Julian and Andy used to beat him up all the time
22 Buckley 's Grimsby Town have won five and drawn one of their last six to ease within sight of the famous names at the top — and nothing would give him greater satisfaction than to leave them behind at the end of the season .
23 He thought everything was easy to those who believed ; and nothing would persuade him that it was not so .
24 He has set is hand to it along lines dictated by his own will , and nothing can deter him .
25 So much that sometimes I can almost believe he belongs to me , that nobody and nothing can take him away .
26 He wanted back stalls because he 'd be right under the gallery and no-one would see him .
27 He knew he ought not to mark the books really , but it was only a tiny mark in pencil and no-one could accuse him of defacing library property , not really , it would n't do for an ex-library committee member to be caught defacing library property now would it .
28 Then it follows from that that understanding Shakespeare and keeping the understanding of Shakespeare alive is also a good because if , for example , this great , rich and wonderful thing were simply there in the world and no-one could see him and no-one could understand him , and no-one was any longer thinking or talking about him , that also would be a secondary impoverishment .
29 Then it follows from that that understanding Shakespeare and keeping the understanding of Shakespeare alive is also a good because if , for example , this great , rich and wonderful thing were simply there in the world and no-one could see him and no-one could understand him , and no-one was any longer thinking or talking about him , that also would be a secondary impoverishment .
30 ‘ Anyroad , Bob 'll already have set off and I may meet him up on t'tops . ’
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