Example sentences of "him and [pron] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Him and me work as a team , you know , I do n't do any freelance jobs , especially not with a pair of low-down — ’
2 The RUC said : ‘ It appears the journalist met a man who is unknown to him and whose identity he is unable to verify .
3 Afterwards the RUC said : ‘ It appears the journalist met a man who is unknown to him and whose identity he is unable to verify .
4 As he opened his mouth in protest , she lifted her hand to stop him and her elbow caught the card which he 'd pushed into the bin .
5 She was glad at last to have a use for information from Robert : it justified her relationship with him and her decision to press ahead with the case .
6 Jessica grabbed his bursting penis and almost pulled it into her , then threw her legs around him and her arms and crushed him until he gasped , still coming , and then she let out a mighty hoot , a hoot to wake hotel guests two corridors away , she had come as well , once , hard , like a violent convulsion .
7 She tumbled forward against him and her hair , escaping from the ribbon at the nape of her neck , made a tent for their faces .
8 After the Anglo-French reconciliation of 1303 , Edward wrote to Marie of France thanking her for her letters in which she expressed her desire for a meeting and conversation between him and her stepson , Philip the Fair .
9 He was a merry young man and yet , quite firm in his discipline , so that the child was eager to please him and her education made rapid strides .
10 Smith , 44 , of Hyde , Cheshire , who had been married to Norma for 23 years , snapped when she told him she wanted him out of the house and made ‘ unflattering comparisons ’ between him and her lover , Kenneth Ormiston .
11 She sat down and began to pour out the tea and , her voice still quiet , she went on , ‘ I do n't suppose it 's really so bad for you , instructing or teaching , whatever it is you do , but in the Naafi , amidst the clatter — ’ she now looked at him and her words were spaced as she went on , ‘ and the chaff and the ribbing ; well , I sometimes think I have died and gone to hell , because that 's what I think hell must be like ; constant joking , especially when you hear the same thing repeated over and over again . ’
12 He was a shadowy figure from the past whose name was scarcely ever mentioned except on those rare occasions when they spoke of the accident , that terrible accident that had claimed the lives of him and her mother when Harriet was only four years old .
13 She had worked for him and her mother in a variety of businesses and was always assured that she would inherit his estate when he died .
14 The old woman stared at him and her eyes were bright and piercing and the silver thimble had fallen to the lap of her dress , and her fists were clenched now as if she searched for a memory , and her husband watched her anxiously as if he witnessed that she was at war within herself .
15 Slowly her head turned to him and her eyes smiled at his .
16 She looked up at him and her eyes were troubled .
17 The Female Beggar in An Evening Walk — the first of Wordsworth 's deserted women — laments for her soldier ‘ Asleep on Bunker 's charnel hill afar ’ , and the Female Vagrant , having followed her husband across the Atlantic , loses him and her children and is reduced to destitution .
18 He had a moment — it was more than a moment , it was minutes together — when he wanted to cup a hand around her head and for all that they were still almost in the street , open his trousers and feel her tongue lap him and her lips close on him .
19 She looked at him and her lips moved , but nothing audible came from them .
20 Two years of silence , of splits between her life with him and her commitment to politics desperately ended by leaving both .
21 If they were both standing , perhaps having drinks with friends , she would lean towards him and her glass would tilt and spill .
22 He thought of his bed at the Rorim ; then he thought of Madra in it , her warmth under him and her hands on his back , her hair in his mouth .
23 She looked up at him and her mouth , already close to his , moved closer , seemed to falter , then moved closer and they kissed .
24 She glared at him and her impatience at his frailty began to neutralize her fear .
25 ‘ Then what is doing it ? ’ she asked , her face tilted up to him and her throat a fine line in the firelight .
26 Alexei dived towards him and their shields flashed angrily as they collided , sword arms locked .
27 She had left him and their home in Oxford the day before .
28 They met outside the Social Services and he had pleaded with her to return to him and their home in Oxford .
29 His hands held her to him and their bodies moved together in the most intimate way with no thought of denial .
30 The wife , dependent on her husband 's increasing earnings , is committed to the work of home-making for him and their children .
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