Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] he [adv prt] to the " in BNC.

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1 The author has felt that these latter efforts have not in some way brought out the real flavour of the game in the sense that the play does not take place on a real pitch , surrounded by players who get in the way of run-making and occasionally do their stuff by bowling the batsman out or sending him back to the pavilion by some other means .
2 The alternatives would seem to be handing General Noriega to the US forces to face trial on drug-trafficking charges , which the Vatican has said it will not do , or giving him up to the new Panamanian Government , which has already declared it ‘ has enough on him to put Noriega away for life ’ .
3 I 'll have it out of him or turn him over to the press gang .
4 Not our questions about the problem of God , but God 's call and invitation to us determined the direction of his thought and shaped his writing ; and it was this basic orientation that led him on to the restatement of christological and trinitarian dogma as the foundation and horizon of theology itself .
5 She took hold of his hand and led him over to the small bed .
6 McGowan took Jed by the arm and led him over to the cardboard box .
7 Two policemen forcibly took her arms from around her son , and led him out to the car to join his sister .
8 They beat him up in the alleyway , tied his hands and led him off to the Marshalsea .
9 We call upon the BBC for a radical change of policy and demand programmes which build character instead of destroying it , which encourage and sustain faith in God and bring Him back to the heart of our family and national life .
10 In the end I had to go up to him and bring him back to the fire .
11 Could I say to the minister and bring him back to the real world about regeneration .
12 Charles was grumbling as Damian supported his weak body and helped him out to the car .
13 However , when he grabbed Richard Baxter 's cloak it came away , and before he could do any more harm a couple of by-standers restrained him and hauled him off to the magistrates .
14 We tied his arms behind his back and handed him over to the next village headman we encountered .
15 They caught a suspicious individual one evening , and turned him over to the police ; but he turned out to be a frightened bilberry-picker who had lost his way .
16 I 've been sent here to find out what really happened and get him back to the States . ’
17 With the rough timbers pushed wide I got behind the bullock and sent him on to the opening .
18 A Polish farmer fits him out with a complete set of dry clothes and sends him on to the West German embassy in Warsaw .
19 Mr Jarvis grinned and , as she picked up the squirrel and took him over to the recovery cage , he followed and stood watching as she settled her patient down .
20 The police considered this and took him down to the station — for tea and sticky buns .
21 ‘ Do you disapprove of us , my angel ? ’ she asked , exalted by wine and overbearing , and took him down to the kitchen to give him some of the leftover chicken .
22 I got hold of him by the scruff of the neck and took him along to the police box and rang up for the wagon .
23 Some of the near contemporary songs which have survived from the period describe Rodrigo himself as capturing Garcia and handing him over to the brothers .
24 Jed grabbed Gorelli by the upper arm and spun him on to the balcony .
25 ‘ You 'll be better off lying down , sir , ’ he said , and supported him through to the bedroom .
26 The house , nevertheless , had visitors interesting to the children ; a couple of famous Congregationalist laymen Frank Salter and Bernard Manning , both of whom were historians and riotous rompers with children ; the Reddaway children who lived next door ; the daughters of G. G. Coulton the English hammer of Popes ; and the friendship between the two sets of children caused Coulton to take an interest in Michael and carry him off to the village church at Coton to see medieval graffiti .
27 I was warm and sleepy but my master kept haranguing me : compliance seemed the easiest way out so I put on my boots , grabbed my cloak and accompanied him down to the Templar chapel .
28 His whole body felt bruised from the speed at which Doyle had dragged him round and thrown him on to the floor when they heard the shout outside .
29 Maxim reached around him to pull the front door shut and ushered him down to the car .
30 Me strode away , leaving Athelstan scrambling — to clear his writing tray , repack the leather bag and follow him out to the yard .
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