Example sentences of "[adv] he [vb -s] [prep] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Perhaps he walks on the right side , with just the metal grid fence separating him from the rolling fields of graves — in no hurry , since there is no class for him to make .
2 So he says to the oldest one he said just do ah , he said three four kick or something
3 Thus he slices through the old argument between ‘ formalism ’ and ‘ realism ’ by inserting what we may call a notion of intervention .
4 I note here how eloquently he yields to the muted viola and cello duo at 2'07 ’ , withdrawing his tone to the merest thread of sound , barely grazing the string .
5 Jack Spier has trouble keeping his emotions under control whenever he looks at the Red Cross letter from his parents saying goodbye .
6 Now he clashes with the tough Pole , Darius Michalczewski , for the vacant IBF International light-heavyweight championship , a formidable task , according to manager Barney Eastwood .
7 Now he stands in the small parking lot at the back of the hospital , bargaining with God .
8 When a train rumbles overhead he leans towards the Trinidadian and sneers , ‘ Hey , Sambo , hear that ?
9 Today he lives in the Eastern Thai town of Trat and , although officially retired , is still regarded as the overall leader of the Khmer Rouge .
10 He takes his time strolling over , and when he gets here he sits at the far end of the bench like he does n't know me .
11 Rather he points to the theoretical paradox involved , namely that the human sciences ' very emphasis on historicity as a mode of being was equally applicable to themselves as forms of knowledge , and inevitably destroyed any attempt to formulate universal laws comparable to those of the natural sciences .
12 Then he turns towards the wizened , worn-out figure of the 87-year-old woman sitting beside him and says : ‘ He is doing all right , there seems to be some response .
13 When items are faulty , not delivered on time , or more rarely where Ian has by his own fault succeeded in botching an order , then he goes on the defensive .
14 so er I 've got to keep him off school today and see how he goes over the next day or two .
15 These feelings tend to be transitory but some patients remain psychologically disturbed for many years and , in a few psychological difficulties develop in the convalescent period which were not apparent during the acute episode.While these problems can sometimes be anticipated in hospital on the basis of the patient 's reaction to his illness , and any premorbid difficulties which he has encountered in the past , a better idea of his potential can be gained by following him during the convalescent period to observe how he copes with the various stresses and strains which he encounters during this time .
16 There 's no way they 're not going to have heard of him so it all depends on how he reacts to the other prisoners , ’ one prison source said .
17 For the diminutive Andy — people often wonder how he hauls around the pro bags that stand as high as him — the triumphs he has shared with Nick Faldo are something of a fulfilment of his own ambition of winning the titles himself : he started as a tournament professional with dreams of a major championship before realizing he would not make the grade as a pro , and so took up the bag instead of the club .
18 RORY Underwood makes his last appearance of the season at Twickenham today when he plays for the Royal Air Force against the Army in the crucial final match of this year 's Inter Service tournament .
19 Please pray for these dear brothers and sisters in Christ , and try very hard to hear Theo Angelov when he speaks at the Scottish Baptist Assembly in Edinburgh at the end of October .
20 Macaulay gets on the wrong plane and ends up in the Big Apple where he books into the palatial Plaza Hotel , much to the suspicion of various flunkies including a camp Tim Curry .
21 Bull was always , first and foremost , a virtuoso both of technical invention and obviously of performance , even in compositions probably or certainly intended for the organ where he appears as the direct heir of Preston and Blitheman .
22 He will instead compete at Stoke where he lives in the British Student Championships on June 27 and 28 .
23 Again and again he fails at the offending cornice until , half-buried , half-dead , there is no snow left , the axes bite and he is up .
24 Rather forbiddingly he saunters along the lower rink , past the clumps of families , the young mothers , the babies ' cries .
25 Now one must wait to see how well and happily he adapts to the professional cricketers ’ treadmill .
26 Certainly he returns towards the Promised Land in very different style from the way he left it .
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