Example sentences of "[noun] he [vb -s] [prep] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 This mixed condition he shares with many others , not all of them writers ; it is a condition we are entitled to call traditional .
2 Last month PHILIP VANN looked at artists who had come up from the mines to become artists ; in this issue he concentrates on those artists who went down to the pit to paint
3 To ask the Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs what importance he attaches to developing relations with the newly independent Baltic states .
4 In a remarkably frank interview , Coppell confronted the troubles he faces after eight years at Selhurst Park , and said he agrees with the inevitable consequence should he be unable to pass the biggest test of his career .
5 When filming a combat he pans round two adversaries so that , as each in turn assumes the aggressive role , he is observed moving in from the right .
6 Dr Fitzhugh admits that the prices he pays for commissioned prices are well below market value ; but few artists turn down the opportunity for such excellent exposure .
7 But there is some instability in the accounts he gives of dark professions of faith , in his acerbities and fatalities .
8 In some of the cases he deals with these interests supplement one another ; but they nevertheless remain distinct .
9 But we should also note ( as the critics largely did not ) the positive values he inculcates in such reflections , with which he concludes his piece : ‘ Must we find all work prosaic … ? ’
10 To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department what information he has on new initiatives undertaken by car manufacturers as part of his strategy to defeat car crime .
11 In his latest book he tells of sophisticated computers that can move tall buildings in the opposite direction to the tremors .
12 He makes it repeatedly clear that he addresses himself to the Greeks who have little knowledge of Roman institutions ; but on the other hand he refers to Roman readers ( 6.5 1 .3–8 ) and is quite obviously looking at them over his shoulder .
13 The one who will be in open an oppos opposition , the other a subtle infiltration. he comes in many guises does n't he ?
14 One element he stresses in both cases is that it is a lot easier to understand language demands than the theory and institutions of democracy and constitutional society , especially for people who lack both political education and political experience .
15 And even now , as he never has time off for spending the twenty-something quid a week they 'll dish him for the one-hundred-and-twenty-hour stint he puts in most weeks , he could just afford a wife and kid .
16 In making this judgment he resorts to various clues which usually indicate some of the commoner forms of pollution :
17 Sonny has a number of different slides he uses for different occasions .
18 And the easiest way to ensure that — a readiness to criticise the Government at each and every turn — is the one temptation he has at all costs to resist .
19 In fact he goes to great lengths to argue that the most important consequences of educational progress actually require ‘ sensitive judgment ’ using ‘ interpretative reasoning ’ , and that in the arts this means that valid and reliable assessment can only be achieved through what Best calls ‘ inter-subjective agreement ’ .
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