Example sentences of "[conj] [pron] [verb] him to the " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Mr Woodcock , 47 , of Holgate , York , grabbed the weapon with one hand and it went off , blasting a wall with pellets , but he hung on , dragging the raider into the car park outside the restaurant , where he pinned him to the ground until armed police arrived .
2 Although it was late and Mr Edgar was tired after his journey , Joseph insisted , so I took him to the master 's room .
3 Here is a passage of Thoreau which both demonstrates the creative process and also shows that it led him to the peak experience which he termed being charmed .
4 He is engaged in conversation by McKendrick , another participant in the Colloquium , but does not reveal to him that what attracts him to the conference is the opportunity it affords him to go to the World Cup qualifying match between England and Czechoslovakia ( scene one ) .
5 I got him into the factory and from there we got the ambulance and … and I took him to the Royal Victoria Infirmary . ’
6 P. E. A man dropped dead in front of me on the street and I took him to the mortuary and I got into trouble over it because I did n't search the body properly .
7 This was going on for a couple of days , so I was getting worried and I took him to the prison doctor and he says , ‘ It might be with you breastfeeding , try him on the bottle . ’
8 One evening , perched in his landing window , he shot towards my wife with an air rifle and I reported him to the police .
9 But luck , the storm and I introduced him to the Bomb , and that settled his game .
10 He asked to see the horse and they took him to the stable .
11 And then the police come and they tape him to the top of the ceiling
12 He had sailed to Ninfania from Illyria , in a big double bass of a galleon , with a prow carved like a volute , and it brought him to the shore in the harbour he then designated Ribaris , after the peak where the Ark had come to rest , once all the waters of the flood had drained out of the plughole of divine fury .
13 This meant that he never fought them on his own terms , always theirs , and it blinded him to the realisation that when all else failed , when all the appeals for ‘ fair play ’ fell on stony ground , that he could have utilised his mass following of workers to shake the ground beneath the Empire .
14 I disagreed with much of what he had to say , but I welcome him to the House from this Bench and look forward to debating these issues with him on many occasions .
15 I felt like a jaded casting director as I banished him to the wastepaper bin .
16 As she followed him to the back of the shop , Sophie remembered with sharp dismay the appointment she had made with Dawn .
17 Somewhat to his own surprise , Harry found himself booking a single room , despite the exorbitant tariff , and following the prim receptionist as she led him to the door .
18 ‘ He 's got party tricks like shaking hands , and when we walk him to the shops on a lead he loves being cuddled by children and old people .
19 His hands dangled over the sides of the wheelchair as they took him to the salon to meet the Bishop .
20 Angry Brian Reatus , 44 , allegedly foamed at the mouth as he pinned him to the wall .
21 In a violent struggle , the policeman found it necessary to unscrew the man 's wooden leg as he wrestled him to the ground , striking him across the head with his truncheon .
  Next page