Example sentences of "he take [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The poor boy , who resembles Philip Roth , tells the story in which he takes part , and does so in a manner that can be considered uncontroversial .
2 MASTER potter Michael Hughes hopes to raise more than just a few laughs when he takes part in a marathon charity event .
3 We 've got one chap who 's autistic can you imagine , and he takes part .
4 He takes part in an invitation event at Crystal Palace and a week later will run his first international steeplechase in America .
5 He takes things very much to heart like his grandad did , ’ the old lady said .
6 I 've noticed he takes things from Christopher now
7 Coton 's plea is likely to cut no ice with Taylor as he takes England into a qualifying campaign for the 1994 World Cup finals .
8 He takes Adam Smith to task for conflating the division of labour in society with the division within the enterprise .
9 So John 's now taking it on the basis that he takes budget with it so
10 Twenty-five two d , members allowances for meetings of the South-West county farms authority , recommended to approve attendance travelling and subsistence , Mr group , and travelling and subsistence only when he takes duties on behalf of that group .
11 That one in whose eyes death is destruction — he takes hold of the ( divine ) command , ‘ Do not cast yourselves into destruction .
12 Panting and breathless , but no longer shaking , he takes hold of his tuft of hair , winds it into a coil on top of his head and reties his turban .
13 [ He takes hold of PAMELA . ]
14 With his right hand he takes hold of his chin .
15 He takes pride in his appearance , setting a high standard to exemplify his healthy leadership style .
16 He takes pride in clearing his desk at 5.30p.m. and leaving for home .
17 The literary bias of British film reviewing has rarely been quite so plainly stated — Coward is the established name , his reputation guaranteed by years of theatrical success , hence he takes precedence over the mere maker of pictures .
18 He takes toys from children , on the street .
19 But I do say that we , the ordinary man , must either insist he takes responsibility for what he discovers , and does concern himself with the ethics of its methods and application , or accept the responsibility to ourselves , and make our own decisions about how science is used .
20 Palmer is making a clean break with the past in many ways , and in an interview with Digital News & Review magazine , he takes issue with Ken Olsen 's dismissal of Unix as ‘ Russian trucks and snake oil ’ .
21 I think an MP is there to respond to correspondence , and I 'm very surprised that he takes issue with one of our officers because she does n't happen to be the Chief Officer , and I 'm very sad about that .
22 ‘ The master 's , Colonel Swanton 's ( I know because he takes size 12 ) , Captain Heatherington-Scott 's ( he had his name in his ) and one pair more .
23 He takes shelter at a Pennine farm where the man 's daily conversational output is ‘ Two more dead i ’ beck ’ and the woman listens to Holly 's soliloquy like a raggedy Miranda , astonished as the sound of a human voice .
24 He wants the man he sees as responsible for Peggy 's death to suffer as much as possible before he takes Stone out himself .
25 He takes poststructuralist assumptions about the death of the author and the disappearance of the self-subsistent ego , and applies them to the history of English poetry , in a work which combines ingenious close reading , impressive knowledge of metre , and an overall argument of stratospheric thinness and remoteness .
26 If she did then family honour demands that he takes revenge . ’
27 Bingham L.J. , at p. 287 , plainly took the view that a customer in a supermarket assumes some of the rights of an owner when he takes goods into his possession and exercises control over them by putting them in a basket or trolley , and thus appropriates them .
28 In his fantasias and toccatas it is not difficult to trace Venetian influences , particularly in the six fantasias ‘ in the manner of an echo ’ where he takes advantage of the two manuals of the organ to ‘ echo ’ motives duly marked f and p .
29 There is no appropriation at the moment when he takes possession of the goods because he was entitled to do so under the terms of the contract of sale , a contract which is , it is true , voidable , but has not been avoided at the time the goods are handed over .
30 There is no appropriation at the moment when he takes possession of the goods because he was entitled to do so under the terms of the contract of sale , a contract which is , it is true , voidable , but has not been avoided at the time the goods are handed over .
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