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

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1 With my best caricature British accent I reduce him to a fit of stifled giggles .
2 So this afternoon I had him on the settee
3 Perhaps it was just the times I saw him in the Div II Championship year and the season after that .
4 He had reached six when he played at a ball down the leg side which hit him on the thigh , with the bat some inches away , and was taken by Dujon .
5 A vast impenetrable openness which froze him to the spot where he was as if he was caught in ice .
6 The release of his second album , ‘ Hands Free ’ , follows the success of Mona , a hit from his first album which established him as a singer/songwriter but did very little to convince a cynical world that under the suntan there lurked a talented guitarist .
7 In addition to being a hunchback the painter Toulouse-Lautrec suffered from a condition which endowed him with an oversized penis .
8 BIG Dave Beasant hit back at the Chelsea fans who booed him off the pitch and blasted : ‘ You 're out of order . ’
9 The secondary premise of Sean 's Show , as described by producer Katie Lander , is that ‘ he 's being controlled by scriptwriters who treat him as a sitcom character .
10 Honest enquirers , like the lawyer who asked him about the greatest commandment , were impressed and attracted by his Bible-based teaching ( though , as with the rich young ruler , they did not all respond to it positively ) .
11 . Thought better by Jewry itself to withdraw him from the public gaze .
12 Reid 's star began to rise with a vengeance last year when he became associated with the stable of Peter Chapple-Hyam who provided him with the horse every jockey wants to have — a Derby winner .
13 Bond is still despised by Burnley supporters who blame him for the club 's demise after his season in charge eight years ago .
14 Taskopruzade 's grandfather , for example , studied under Molla Yegan , probably at some time alter 839/1435–6 , and it was Molla Yegan who recommended him for the post at Taskopru .
15 18 MINUTES : Le Tissier took a corner from the right and Hall , escaping his marker , connected with a tremendous header to score against the club who rejected him as a 15-year-old .
16 But Durie still feels uncomfortable at the club who backed him to the hilt in wiping out the damaging ‘ cheat ’ slur .
17 Samuel Beckett We want him in a nice jail where we can keep an eye on him .
18 They then wrapped it in linen and concealed it about their person : to jade a horse they touched him in the pit of the shoulder with the frog 's bone : to release the horse they touched him on the rump .
19 They then wrapped it in linen and concealed it about their person : to jade a horse they touched him in the pit of the shoulder with the frog 's bone : to release the horse they touched him on the rump .
20 They bound the restaurant owner , who moaned feebly and thrashed about a bit ; then with Lambert 's aid they hoisted him to the high seat .
21 In the spring he took him to the house in Normandy .
22 Mr. Russell lost out when he received a 6p rise which put him above the income support level .
23 One of the best known names in football has been teaching a group of schoolchildren some of the skills which took him to the top of the game .
24 He walked back by a different route which took him along the waterfront .
25 It was an experience which steeled him for the future task of having as many as a dozen major country houses under construction in any one year .
26 The famous trip to Europe , which Lear had constantly referred to in his letters as if it were an experience which united him with the great ornithologist , became the bitter disappointment of a friendship manqué .
27 Plainly Henry Ward Beecher , the great New York preacher of puritanism , should either have avoided having tumultuous extra-marital love-affairs or chosen a career which did not require him to be quite such a prominent advocate of sexual restraint ; though one can not entirely fail to sympathise with the bad luck which linked him in the mid-1870s with the beautiful feminist and advocate of free love , Victoria Woodhull , a lady whose convictions made privacy difficult .
28 Outside in the corridor I grabbed him by the elbow .
29 Mark turned , just as the dogs took off together in a huge leap which struck him in the chest , knocking him backwards into the boot where he sat , legs dangling , with both arms wrapped around the excited dogs .
30 In fact , he has usually been regarded as the supreme Minimalist painter , but perceptions have been changing through a closer study of his earlier work which reveals him as an artist whose origins lie in painterly Abstraction .
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