Example sentences of "with his [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 She then places her hand in his and with his help gradually rises onto pointe until she poses triumphantly in attitude .
2 With his help , she might learn how to develop and direct her psychic powers .
3 It did not require much effort on Gehlen 's part to convince the Americans that the real enemy was Russia and with his help they could have a ready-made intelligence organisation .
4 According to Golitsin everything the West believed about Russia was wrong and they needed to start all over again with his help and interpretation of the truth .
5 Yanto took her hand , and with his help she began to undo his fly buttons .
6 Again with his help , she reverently rolled the condom down the shaft of his erect member .
7 Princess Anne , who was at the helm of the boat she chose with his help , gazed back and told him simply : ‘ Yes . ’
8 With his help I arranged to invest some money in a shipping company called Clarrikers .
9 Is the Prime Minister further aware that those men like their jobs and that , with his help , they would be able to keep them , but he is not prepared to help them ?
10 With his help , Jane worked last winter on bringing these two selves together ; on stopping the inner conflict .
11 Dhuoda and Nithard wrote at the very beginning of Charles the Bald 's reign : Nithard believed the young king showed promise , Dhuoda that this generation of Carolingians were predestined by God to rule , and with His help would shine forth in their success .
12 A learned pagan philosopher might occasionally question the necessity for temples or sacrifices : Seneca anticipated many a Christian with his insistence that ‘ God is close to you , with you , within you ’ , so that temples and sacrifices were otiose .
13 It had to do with his insistence on using ‘ real ’ people , which was seen as a daunting prospect by many of the crew .
14 He over-valued the pound when we went into the ERM and , coupled with his insistence of achieving zero inflation , that is destroying industry , jobs , homes , families and any chance of rebuilding Britain for a better future .
15 Hall does , indeed , seem to he touching on some very important issues with his insistence on a relatively separate sphere of discourse and communication .
16 Admittedly in public Harold Wilson did his best to argue that Britain did not possess an " independent " deterrent with his insistence that the British Polaris force was dependent on some American components and other assistance .
17 With his freight company working hand-in-hand with his shipping line he was able to undercut his competitors by offering their clientele the kind of package deals no company director could resist .
18 Although he had all the appearance of an old hand with his beard and sea-salt 's pipe , he was a brewery worker by trade .
19 She felt a hand resting lightly on her shoulder and she turned to look at Craig , almost unrecognizable now with his beard grown and his moustache thick and dark above his mouth .
20 Caledor sent his ambassador back with his beard shaved off and said if Gotrek wanted compensation he should come to Ulthuan and collect it .
21 Dog agility appeals to all ages … although seven year old Daniel Treagus was having trouble with his Cavalier King Charles spaniel which refused to climb the A frame :
22 Noting a coincidence between the ‘ open structure ’ of adolescence , in which the subject , ‘ in the aftermath of the oedipal stabilisation of subjective identity , … again questions his identifications , along with his capacities for speech and symbolisation ’ ( p. 9 ) , and the ‘ open structure ’ of the novel which explores a similar fluidity , negotiating the ‘ frontiers between differences of sex or identity , reality and fantasy , act and discourse ’ , Kristeva suggests that some form of literary history , that of novelistic discourse , might contribute to the fundamental project of psychoanalysis , that is , ‘ how to understand perversion in a way that is at once faithful and noncomplacent ’ ( p. 22 ) .
23 Without a word , he took the staff I 'd been using , drove it into the ground with his sledge hammer , secured it with guy ropes and tied a washing line for me from it to the Land Rover .
24 He who shall find his field , or his vineyard , or his garden , desert , let him incontinently enter thereon ; and he who shall find his husbanded , let him pay him that hath cultivated it the cost of his labour , and of the seed which he hath sown therein , and remain with his heritage , according to the law of the Moors .
25 or something like that , er or your husband even with his cheque book , then you just have to tell us .
26 Mr Hill , a former supervisor at British Nuclear Fuels in Preston , Lancs , will be presented with his cheque in London today by Arthur Daley actor George Cole .
27 A former supervisor at British Nuclear Fuels in Preston , he will be presented with his cheque in London today by Arthur Daley actor George Cole .
28 At the front , two high curved windows gave a view of the square garden while at the rear one huge expanse of glass looked out over a stone wall with three niches , each containing a marble statue ; Venus , naked , one hand delicately shielding the mons Veneris , one pointing at her left nipple , a second female figure , half robed and wearing a wreath of flowers and , between them , Apollo with his lyre , laurel-crowned .
29 ‘ I went to read his Vico and it 's still crammed with his manuscript notes , bursting with them , between every page .
30 ( 27 November 1777 ) Among his complaints were that Mozart and his mother had stayed too long in Munich and Augsburg using up their money on lodging expenses without having any means of earning money , that Mozart was not keeping him fully apprised of exactly where his plans lay , how he was proposing to get from one place to another and by which route and when , that he was not keeping up with his composition , nor arranging to have existing works copied so that he could present them to an influential Prince or noble , and that he had not taken the right sorts of composition with him — too many symphonies and not enough church music .
  Next page