Example sentences of "he [verb] [pron] [adv prt] to " in BNC.

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1 ‘ I suppose he made me out to be some kind of thief !
2 It must have been then , in a final flush of family feeling , that he made everything over to Nigel . ’
3 Somehow , he made it through to the end .
4 He lowered himself on to the toilet seat and jumped down on to the floor .
5 Shaking his big head slowly he lowered himself on to the chaise-longue and sat back carefully .
6 He lowered himself on to her breasts and she moaned as he held himself up on his elbows and barely allowed himself to touch her , his hard chest sliding lightly back and forth over the aching tenderness of her bosom .
7 He lowered himself on to the sofa and unzipped the top of his leather suit .
8 He lowered himself down to the bed and her hands frantically flew to his bare chest .
9 Rodney went up and Siobhan reached Tamara down to him and he passed her on to me .
10 He passed them on to another colleague who led us finally to our places which were kept for us in the Grand Salon .
11 He passed it on to the others at their dinner time meeting .
12 The solution was simple : he passed it on to his son .
13 Robert 's own Christian name , as we know , had come from his maternal grandfather , Robert Hasted , and he passed it on to his second child , Robert Edward ; thereafter the same name would continue in that branch of the family until well into the 20th century .
14 Count Geoffrey , by concentrating his forces on the conquest of Normandy , was able to recover the continental part of his wife 's inheritance by 1144 , and in 1150 he passed it on to his eldest son Henry Plantagenet , now twenty years old .
15 He passed it on to Winston .
16 So he sold it on to a this kid and it was up Baxters
17 If he rode me over to Romorantin to catch the early train to Paris , would I mind going out to Reine for him ?
18 But beneath it she understood , accepted , found it far easier to hate him , when he fought her back to the bed , than to ignore him ; the bitings and scratchings of anger coming near enough to passion so that when he entered her again she found it possible , in her loathing , her detestation , her bitter resentment , to wrap her own strong , hard limbs about him in a grip designed to wound and crush him but which could also excite .
19 He asked her out to lunch because he hoped that she had missed him .
20 Four days later he asked her out to dinner , and she walked home without her feet touching the pavement .
21 ‘ Within four minutes he asked me out to dinner .
22 He led her up to the bedrooms , the floors and stairs wooden , fans whirring overhead in the steamy heat , mosquito netting over every door and window .
23 Still gripping her wrist , he led her over to the French windows .
24 After he had taken two large brandies , very fast ( too fast for what looked like a very fine marque ) , he led her over to the sofa and sitting beside her , put his arm around her .
25 Still offering no explanation , he led her down to the riverbank and then the rest of the way back to the centre .
26 He led her out to his car .
27 He led me through to the next room , and up against the wall there lay a stack of some ten to fifteen canvases .
28 Now , " he said , placing a creaky arm across my shoulders as he led me through to the parlour , " I want you to meet Vron . "
29 He led me back to the dining hall , vast and empty save for my two friends .
30 They were ready now , and he led them back to the Saloon .
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