Example sentences of "he is [adv] [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 He is firmly committed to the principle that Drama can stand on its own as an academic subject .
2 He is firmly established in the half back line , which allows him the luxury of being able to press forward in support of his attacking colleagues .
3 High levels of spatial mobility are involved as he is regularly posted to regions where the multinational is operating .
4 An RUC officer said : ‘ He is regularly stopped at road checks by our patrols .
5 Kinnaird , who is chairing the seminar , says he is regularly asked to find a woman for a senior management job ‘ all other things being equal ’ .
6 From 1266 onwards he is regularly described as magister in official records , indicating that he too was recognized as a rabbi within the Jewish community .
7 Here , according to Acts , he is officially admitted to the Nazarean Party .
8 ‘ He is lost to you ; he is utterly bewitched !
9 But the position from which he is today assessed rests on precarious , even quaint , over-simplifications .
10 Many know him as the British jazz singer , but he is equally respected for his brilliance as a film and tv critic , modern art expert , writer and fisherman .
11 whether he is adequately insured ;
12 He is traditionally associated , very closely , with the Messiah , the anointed one , the rightful king .
13 In fact Dorothy tells us more about the sunset and the landscape than William — and yet he is traditionally thought of in association with such moments of natural grandeur .
14 As much as he is thoroughly yankified , known to all the world as Jimmy Lin , with his high-rise apartment on the Upper West Side and scarcely a trace of an accent , he none the less still feels a strong connection to his native island .
15 This paragraph seems to indicate that it may be possible for a person who has received information in confidence which he could have obtained through other sources to relieve himself of the 'special disability " under which he is otherwise placed by going to those sources .
16 Depending on the nature of the offence , he is either warned to lay off , or to look for a job elsewhere .
17 In the small crop of past Paul Merton interviews , mostly with TV magazines , he is invariably described as a ‘ down to earth , average guy ’ , which is fairly accurate , although hardly an adequate explanation for Merton 's increasing success .
18 And yet , over the past few years , he is probably regarded in the Caribbean as the West Indies bowler able to extract more movement off the pitch than any other and , certainly , during last summer 's Test series against England , he and Ambrose were the leaders in the ‘ unplayable delivery ’ department .
19 He is probably known as Champagne Tom in the office , always breaking open a bottle of bubbly to celebrate handing over a fortune to another punter .
20 Yet despite the iconic status of Van Gogh 's ‘ tragic ’ life , it is the appearance of his work by which he is ultimately signified , his thick impasto brush-stroke , his vibrant yellows , the urgency of his creative drive .
21 During his death he takes a series of trips in different vehicles : the airplane-like ‘ vehicle of communication ’ , a boat , a car , a horse-drawn buggy and finally the cranial spaceship from which he is ultimately ejected back into life .
22 His life changes as he is drawn into a dangerous aura of incestuous relations surrounding the director and his beautiful sister Jenny ( Liza Walker ) to whom he is immediately drawn .
23 Small wonder our society is so schizophrenic — because the minute the clerk walks out of the store , she or he is immediately bombarded with messages which are in total contradiction to those they receive as employees .
24 He is immediately besieged with cries of ‘ Good Old Charlie ’ , ‘ Mr Evolution ’ and ‘ Slimy Old Pruneface ’ ( from a disgruntled Wilberforce supporter who had slipped into the festivities ) .
25 But he is soon forced to the conclusion that in this case it is impossible to keep the aesthetic side entirely apart from the biographical .
26 So he is soon swaddled up again , and mentally he stays swaddled up until he dies . ’
27 Life without ‘ Geech ’ , as he is affectionately known , is incomprehensible to many of a squad who have risen to world prominence as a direct result of his guidance .
28 Jed 's puzzling ploy of playing wing-forward Kevin Liddle in the three-quarters was vindicated as ‘ Lids ’ , as he is affectionately known at Riverside Park , contributed greatly to an entertaining and enthralling 80 minutes of open rugby from both sides .
29 Dulled by vodka and dope , he is visibly taken aback .
30 Where A makes a promise to B in consideration of B doing or promising to do something which he is already bound to do by reason of a duty imposed upon him by law , whether by a Statute or otherwise : for instance , the duty of a local police authority to afford adequate protection to A and his property ;
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