Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] [prep] he the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Even Terry Lewis hinted at it when I spoke to him the other evening . |
2 | Although there are no hon. Members from Scottish constituencies in their places at the moment , my hon. Friend the Minister made a passing reference to Scotland , which is one of the issues that I discussed with him the other evening . |
3 | I said to him the other day , well four weeks ago . |
4 | I said to him the other morning I said do that again I said look , I 'll get you out of bed . |
5 | I ran into him the other day . ’ |
6 | I wrote for him the following poem ; it seems to me now rather jejune , but it was the spontaneous overflow from a heart both proud and anxious , and not greatly concerned with turning out a literary exemplar : Parachutists ( for L.G.C. ) |
7 | In Lawrence 's Women in Love , completed in 1916 , Birkin contemplates the purchase of a ‘ clear , beautiful chair ’ which expresses for him the living thoughts of ‘ England , even Jane Austen 's England ’ , before these were destroyed by ‘ sordid and foul mechanicalness ’ . |
8 | But like , Mr really really bad like maths teacher , he goes erm he goes to , she goes to him the other day oh you 're only picking on me cos I got ginger hair ! |
9 | He finds Miriam appealing and she holds for him the added attraction of being married and committed herself . |
10 | What had she seen in him the other day that had been so disturbing ? |
11 | Oh yeah , I , but I did n't realize you know with him the old man , the toughy , yeah |
12 | The largest section under David Stirling , who had with him the repaired ‘ Blitz Buggy ’ , headed for the escarpment above Fuka . |
13 | you said to him the other night . |
14 | Cos we said to him the other day how much is so and so Jonathan ? |
15 | I will tell you my secret belief : that for Gustave , in a way he only half-apprehended , I represented life , and that his rejection of me was the more violent because it provoked in him the deepest shame . |
16 | He keeps with him the Thirteen Treasures of Britain which are ancient talismans and magical objects . |
17 | Tall , ruddy-faced and tending to corpulence in his early forties , he had about him the self-satisfied air of a man who has already achieved some measure of public acclaim ; he wore his thick shock of fair hair brushed across his forehead from a centre parting in two matching wings , and his upper lip was thatched with a fashionably luxuriant mustache . |
18 | He had even provided , as an antagonist to North , a fictional member of the NSC , ‘ Aaron Sykes ’ , whose job it was to give flesh and voice to those invisible and voiceless colleagues who had presumably tried to dissuade North from what he was doing : to appear , as the Laws appeared to Socrates , ‘ humming in his ears ’ , about the offence he would cause to country , friends and laws if he did what seemed to him the right thing . |