Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] him [prep] a [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 A pipe feeding the power steering system came adrift on the climb oil to pump out of the hydraulic system , and Fisher seized the opportunity to start building a lead that was eventually to carry him to a record fourth successive Lakes victory .
2 Character is calculated exactly to support the theme of hierarchy on shipboard in Trial Trip , where a galley boy discovers that he is not entirely free to resume a schoolboy friendship with Tich , now in the second year of his apprenticeship , and in Out of the Shallows , where a sixteen-year-old apprentice with a decided chip on his shoulder suffers from the complications which friendship with a steward brings , particularly as the steward , a thoroughly shifty individual , is merely using him as a way of furthering his own ends .
3 She only fought him for a moment or two .
4 I hated myself for wounding him , and for perhaps driving him to a life of wickedness , or even death .
5 The fact that such an occupation was un-likely to provide him with a living did nothing to deter him .
6 It felt good to talk about it , to describe her sense of total humiliation at having , as it were , bared herself to Matthew only to find him in a dressing gown , with some … strumpet drinking coffee with her dress half-unbuttoned .
7 Were n't you saying in the tent only yesterday : " When Charles has been beaten and stripped of his weapons , I 'll personally tonsure him as a cleric and take him back to Ravenna " ?
8 Twice he needed to have attention from a doctor on the course but battled on to record a four under par 66 which was good enough to leave him in a tie for 9th place , nine shots behind the winner , Eduardo Romero from the Argentine .
9 He can only approach him as a vassal might approach a great overlord , a rebellious vassal at that , who now repents his treachery and wishes to make amends .
10 I think we 're walking round , I think 's probably more , more efficient than perhaps inviting him to a meeting .
11 I only saw him for a moment , but my blood seemed to freeze .
12 This , remember , was said only a few months after Battiston of France suffered a serious neck injury when Schumacher , the West German goalkeeper , brutally bodychecked him in a World Cup semi-final .
13 New dating techniques had been developed and these were used on Piltdown Man so exposing him as a fraud .
14 But oh , Nicodemus if you only see him as a teacher you only see the minute part of me !
15 The indignation has a strained and petty air about it : Joe 's greatest crime does not seem to be his contribution to the deaths of 21 servicemen but his letting down his son , who can no longer regard him as a hero .
16 I 'm grateful that you listen to him , and do not treat him like a fool just because he is old . ’
17 I neither would nor could have murdered him , but I do not regard him as a loss . ’
18 Fitzosbert , however , had already dismissed him with a flicker of his eyes and was staring coolly at Sir John as if to prove he was not cowed by any show of authority .
19 Cunningham 's chummy dropping of the ‘ Mr ’ from his name did not fool him for a moment : the withdrawn and irascible figure he had encountered in mid-afternoon was nearer the soul of this man than mine accommodating and smiling host of the Skein of Geese 's oak-panelled restaurant .
20 She thought of Giles Carnaby both continuously and not at all ; he was permanently in the head , but as some unavoidable elemental force — she could not consider him as a person , reflect upon character or deeds .
21 At the moment , she just loves him as a friend .
22 The difference was that until 1688 loans had been made directly to the King : he ran the government as an extension of his private household and , although he was the richest individual in the country , he was in many ways just a private borrower like any other and a prudent lender would not trust him with a loan that would run for a long time .
23 She no longer provided him with a defence against his own yearning for safety which had been so well hidden behind his off-hand behaviour .
24 ‘ Who indeed ? ’ she asked , not believing him for a minute , ‘ But rather arrogant of you to assume I would be willing to be caught . ’
25 She had not seen him for a month .
26 When he finally surfaced , his mouth stale and his eyes hot and gritty , Lucifer 's atmosphere had already enfolded him like a shroud .
27 In welcoming him , the party thus welcomed him as a stereotype .
28 She would not touch him with a bargepole , she said , and never would have done .
29 ‘ If Birkenhead stood alone , ’ Baldwin self-righteously pronounced , ‘ I would not touch him with a barge-pole . ’
30 ‘ I do not see him as a killer .
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