Example sentences of "[verb] [prep] him in [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I 'd been caddying for Ralph Moffatt on the pro circuit and got him through the pre-qualifier at Fairhaven , so I told him I 'd be caddying for him in the Open as I 'd heard nothing from Jack .
2 ‘ It would n't be wise to communicate with him in the usual way while he 's there . ’
3 I think that he , who could have had as many friends as he wished , never realized how much it meant to a lonely and friendless person to have a friend , to be seen walking with him in the rose-red streets of Salamanca , to be able to go to a concert or an art museum with him , to have him opposite me at dinner in even the meanest , cheapest restaurant .
4 This special tribute in WWF News attempts , however inadequately , to give WWF supporters and staff a picture of what Peter 's many qualities and leadership skills meant to some of those who have been privileged to work with him in a great adventure .
5 He has always had a high reputation in England and the Covent Garden Orchestra were obviously eager to work with him in the 1950s .
6 Indeed , the suggestion might well have come from him in the first place , which would have been so much better for everyone .
7 I began to forget why I 'd been attracted to him in the first place . ’
8 Now er on the air at five o'clock mister Tim with drive at five and the early evening sequence , and we 're gon na chat to him in the next thirty minutes because he 's been out shopping today and he 's spent quite a lot of money on some brand new clothes .
9 The Collector of Taxes in Glasgow in 1831 was one Blair , and the Loyal Reformers ' Gazette , a radical publication of the time , has a letter addressed to him in the following terms :
10 On the other hand , now he thought about it — that was one of the advantages of taking time out to think things through — there had been occasions when she had looked at him in a special way which made him think that she might not reject him .
11 Little was done for him in the three years up to his seventeenth birthday when , like so many others , he found companionship and , ironically , the security he craved for by joining the army .
12 He was retained by the king as one of his serjeants between 1287 and 1293 and is to be found acting for him in the 1287 Gloucestershire eyre and in the northern circuit eyres of 1292–3 as well as in the Common Bench and in the Exchequer .
13 Alan Middleton has recently moved to Aberdeen with Christian Literature Crusade , pray that he would settle into his new role in that place and that Alan would be open to what God would do through him in the coming months .
14 The old man had a house built for him in a pretty little Warwickshire village a few miles from Stratford , with the Avon flowing through the garden .
15 The ambulance came , and she ended up looking after him in the intensive care unit .
16 It was a skipper from here called Sopite ( he has his street named after him in the old town ) , who made one of the great technological advances in whaling , when he found a way to render the blubber down on board the whaler instead of having to sail all the way back home with it .
17 On top of that , nine county court judgments and a High Court judgment have been made against him in the past two years , including £6,227 , still unpaid , owed to the Royal Bank of Scotland .
18 It was unlooked-for grace that after supper he should send his page to ask Mistress Hussey to be kind enough to come and speak with him in the small chamber the prince was using as a study .
19 God raised us up with him to rule with him in the heavenly world .
20 He was aware that it was trite , but the alternative was to express the scepticism that had grown inside him in the intervening days .
21 His VC was presented to him in the Western Desert by Montgomery , and he returned to New Zealand in 1943 after active service in Greece , Crete and North Africa .
22 And , if he was a man with , who had never been in trouble before , and perhaps with a young family , and through being hard-up and through illness or any other reason , he would speak to him in a fatherly manner .
23 Among the cardinals , Hugolinus , one of Innocent 's closest confidants and later Pope Gregory IX , is now generally agreed to have been related to him in the third degree .
24 The sun came to him in a warm gust or like a warm veil enveloping him .
25 If it now came to him in a new way it was no doubt simply an aspect of his belongingness with Marcus and Irina .
26 It came to him in the small hours .
27 Conversely , if the accused can show that the material came to him in the normal course of business from a reputable supplier , he may have a defence .
28 Eluard 's soaring ‘ lyricism ’ helped to perpetuate a tyranny , and is the kind of thing which led Kundera to employ the title The Lyric Age for the work which first came to him in the mid-Fifties , and which his publishers prevailed on him to retitle Life is elsewhere when it was completed in 1969 .
29 Then , as the final genuflexions were being made , Mandru clapped his hands together once , and the vibrancers bowed to him in a solemn fashion , before running from his presence through a curtained doorway behind his couch .
30 Where an innocent purchaser is able to rely upon an estoppel , property in the goods passes to him in the normal way , i.e. as if his seller himself has good title to give .
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