Example sentences of "[verb] he [adv prt] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 ADRIAN MAGUIRE moved upsides reigning champion Peter Scudamore at the head of the jockeys ' table when a double aboard Calapaez and Mr Felix moved him on to the 32 winner mark at Plumpton yesterday .
2 It seemed like a minor miracle when she found herself seated within touching distance of the small group of musicians , until she realised that Rune was well-known here , not only by the management but , as the current number drew to a triumphant close , to the players as well , as they drew him on to the low rostrum and surrounded him with much back-slapping and laughter .
3 Culshaw , who knew Karajan better than any of these armchair pundits , noted that since Karajan had never been interested in interpretation for interpretation 's sake — which perhaps helps explain why his readings often outlast those of more ‘ personalized ’ rivals — he naturally diverted his attention to new projects , musical , technological , scientific , logistical , until circumstances or new thinking drew him back to the central repertoire that he had recorded earlier , with other orchestras , other technology .
4 Rocastle got a page long interview expressing some puzzlement at Wilko keeping him out of the first team .
5 If she was n't , he slipped into her mind , the memory of her response to him both torment and humiliation , and dislodging him once he entered her thoughts proved far more difficult than keeping him out in the first place .
6 In spite of his explanations they 'd insisted on signing him out at the little cabin , and he 'd snatched the case out of his car and run back , wondering why it always rained .
7 But he was smiling as they helped him out of the herbaceous border .
8 We try and slip him in on the sly when we think we 've got them hooked .
9 The Scot said : ‘ I was one punch away from knocking him out in the fifth and if I had n't been injured , I would have finished him . ’
10 But had n't he thought that Spiderglass would save him somehow , plug him in to the endless dance of electrons ?
11 I learned that even if you pay the mortgage on your home and your husband contributes nothing to bills , you can not legally lock him out of the matrimonial home .
12 Jack filled him in on the scanty information they had already obtained .
13 Wa walk him back round the parked cars .
14 And he blames AC Scotland for the sabotaging of his plans to raise a second round of finance by stockbrokers in Europe who let him down at the last minute .
15 ‘ We must drive out Medoc , we must send him back to the Dark Ireland , and we must seal up the terrible Gateway that he opened before the creatures and the monsters of that Realm flood through it .
16 A return to five furlongs should see him back on the winning path .
17 It was a trick , leading him back into the same old treadmill .
18 When he was no more than knee high and as slender as a pencil , I dug him out of the wild river bank and planted him in a virginal garden , half an acre of island that consisted of nothing more luxurious or exotic than brick rubble , tilled chalk and grass seed .
19 because he lives a life where material luxury has bought him out of the social expectations imposed on less fortunate people .
20 We tied his arms behind his back and handed him over to the next village headman we encountered .
21 He is currently in Israel although a leg strain will keep him out of the national side , who play Finland in Helsinki in a World Cup tie tomorrow .
22 There is nothing which cuts him off from the early sociologists in his basic assumptions about the importance of instincts and their interaction with men 's cultures .
23 If that had happened in my day , those players would have had him up against the nearest wall and sorted it out .
24 A tube burst and the blow back threw him back against the tender end .
25 He referred to the policy of separate development as ‘ apart-hate ’ in his first few letters , until somebody must have clued him in on the correct spelling .
26 Get him out in the fresh air as much as you can cos
27 Vologsky punched out a sequence on the computer panel , which automatically locked him in to the local frequency .
28 No wonder they 're sending him over to the mad house for th ’ electric . ’
29 The Army had taught him that , too , and the SAS acceptance tests had rammed the lesson home by sending him out over the damp Brecon Beacons with a 55-lb Bergen rucksack knowing he had to cover a certain distance in a certain time but not knowing that when he had done it , there would n't be the trucks they had promised but a vague assur-ance of a cup of tea if he kept on marching a few more miles in that direction .
30 If he improves over the next 3–4 years and lasts until he 's 30 , then you will have to put him up alongside the other 2 .
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