Example sentences of "[pron] [adv] [vb past] he [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 He was magnificent again at Anfield and I personally thanked him after the game for what he had done . ’
2 In fact , I just saw him in the flesh , bruised as that might be . ’
3 and erm I just stuck him in the bath when we got home
4 He turned and came after me waving his revolver , but I easily lost him in the crowd .
5 I also told him about the new hip and thigh diet and said I could do with some more volunteers to try it out .
6 So tail-waggingly , bone-snafflingly puppyish that I nearly tickled him under the ears .
7 I nearly hit him over the head , I thought it was Jason .
8 He did n't even curl a lip in my direction and he did n't howl when I playfully cuffed him behind the ear .
9 Benjamin carefully extinguished the torches and I almost shoved him through the door , glad to escape from the miasma of the unburied dead .
10 I actually advised him at the meeting that he should not and could n't take that motion , and I was by Alderman in that situation , but he still deemed to go ahead and that 's p his prerogative .
11 He was in hospital for nearly a month , and I never saw him until the day I got out .
12 Thomas was two years younger than I and I never met him till the year I left St. Paul 's School ( 1894 ) .
13 Strange , I never told him about the horrors of Maubisson . )
14 He obtained the second by pretending to trip over an unseen obstacle , which inadvertently threw him against the foreman , knocking him to the ground and depositing his daily schedule papers all over the floor .
15 After a hesitant start , the other leftwing and progressive parties who were defeated in the first round have joined Mr Da Silva 's campaign , along with the Socialist and Communist parties , which already supported him in the Popular Front coalition .
16 In a nonsense poem addressed to Virginia Woolf he described himself as " upper-middle " , a class distinction which immediately associated him with the kind of solid and respectable Englishmen amongst whom he passed his business life and to whom he went for — to use one of the characteristic words — " convivial " social life .
17 Elizabeth gave him a push , which almost toppled him to the ground !
18 He pushed his bicycle up the hill from Wheatley station in the company of another new student who had a strangely similar background : of nonconformist origins , with his father an official of a nonconformist Church ; a young man who postponed his own confirmation into the Church of England because his parents might be hurt ; and who swung at the university from his very Protestant background into a sense of the devotional stature in Anglo-Catholicism , and into convictions which never left him for the rest of his life ; a graduate of Balliol College , by name Austin Farrer .
19 His parents were Anglo-Welsh , his father a beer-drinking , musical miner killed in a pit accident when the boy was fourteen ; his mother dogged , the one who bound a steel hoop of gentility around her Philip , the one who somehow saw him to the University of Wales from which he emerged aged twenty with a double honours degree in History and Mathematics .
20 ‘ Then perhaps you do n't mind sharing , the way you once shared him with the little South African girl who was having such a miserable pregnancy when I was there trying to breathe some life into that Johannesburg radio station six years ago . ’
21 Even Dole , who once challenged him for the Presidency , was on verge of tears .
22 He might be the key to her freedom , but she still hated him for the confusion he aroused in her .
23 ‘ I just missed everything , ’ moaned Ivanisevic , who crashed 6-3 , 7-6 , 7-6 to a clay court specialist who also beat him at the French Open this year .
24 ‘ I just missed everything , ’ moaned Ivanisevic , who crashed 6-3 , 7-6 , 7-6 to a clay court specialist who also beat him at the French Open this year .
25 But Davis , now with 65 tournament wins worldwide to his credit , has enormous respect for Doherty , who also beat him in the quarter-finals of October 's Rothmans Grand Prix .
26 It was then that she really saw him for the first time and the blood began to sing in her ears .
27 That confrontation was none of Sharpe 's business ; his concern was with the two horsemen who now faced him in the wood.They glanced past Sharpe , judging how best to rejoin their comrades , though it was clear they wanted Sharpe 's life first .
28 For his own good she frequently reminded him of the horrors and deprivations that would befall him there .
29 He tried protesting to Selkirk , who simply struck him across the mouth and pushed him through the metal-studded door .
30 Massenga gestured to the other six men who immediately followed him into the prison compound , each carrying a Mini-Uzi .
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