Example sentences of "[be] [verb] [prep] him [prep] his " in BNC.

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1 The board was supposed to have been given to him by his uncle , an Hawaiian prince .
2 His right , however , had been transmitted to him through his mother , and it was this transmission through the female , later explained as the inability of a woman to pass on a claim which , as a woman , she could not herself exercise , which worked against Edward 's ambition .
3 He was n't shocked by what he had been told ; he was astonished that it should have been said to him by his own daughter .
4 ‘ And do you deny that for the two years prior to his death you 'd been living with him in his flat in London ? ’
5 Eventually Mr Holdsworth was summoned to attend a Council committee at which he was presented with a list of 26 disciplinary offences , none of which had been raised with him before his suspension .
6 ’ The committee heard evidence from Stemp and from Worcestershire and were satisfied that he had not knowingly taken amphetamines and that they had been administered to him without his knowledge , approval or authority .
7 Everyone in Rosington seemed to be laughing at him behind his back .
8 When two or more persons took as tenants in common , the share of each was treated as a separate item of property which could not only be transferred by him in his lifetime , but which would pass on his death to his representatives .
9 ‘ Because all the old cats will be sniggering at him behind his back , that 's why .
10 In a moment we 'll be speaking to him about his son 's plight , but first we go over to Switzerland where our reporter , John Marshall , has been following the story .
11 ‘ There 's no weight to isolated acts of self-aggrandizing heroism in a decaying society , ’ said a man who was generally nice , and who bore on his forehead the triangular scar of a marble paperweight that had been thrown at him by his best friend , a Tory , for a sentence like that .
12 It 's been forced on him by his doctor .
13 Many , ranging from large estates to small-holdings in towns , were given by him to his French supporters and to those English whom he could tempt over to settle in northern France .
14 Tears misted her eyes as she stared back at him , wishing she did n't feel so confused , and heard him curse softly , as though the words were torn from him against his will .
15 Implexion had stood in the mud of the canyon , the pathetic tents being demolished around him by his militia .
16 Much as poetry was becoming a part of him , his most natural form of self-expression , and the one that reached him first , was music ; side-by-side they were to advance with him throughout his developing days and early professional life .
17 It was Dennis , stopping off for a pee on his way to replenish the supply of social oxygen , already anxious about what the others were saying about him behind his back .
18 As his disciples were identified with him in his ministry and experienced the healing powers of the new age operating through them , so they became partakers of the Kingdom .
19 Perhaps he could do little else , but there is no mistaking the magnanimity of the spirit in which he wrote the following reply to one question which had been sent to him during his exile .
20 Early claims the money is owed to him for his work on the record , the biggest selling rap album of all time , having shifted in excess of 20 million copies .
21 the world is moving round him in his dream ,
22 Freud 's concept of instinct is discussed by him in his paper ‘ Instincts and their Vicissitudes ’ ( 1915 ) .
23 One of his sons , Noel , a retired university lecturer , decided to sort out and study all the documents , including the stories which had been confided to him by his father , to whom he was very close .
24 A design which , on this occasion , must have been suggested to him by his client or-by other craftsmen .
25 This solution , which he regarded as amongst the most valuable and characteristic of all his works ( Hume 1981 p 165 ) and which had originally been suggested to him by his brother as the plan for a large house to be occupied by workmen ( Stephen , 1900 p 201 ) , he published in pamphlets entitled Panopticon or the Inspection House and Panopticon Postscripts Parts 1 and 11 .
26 The latter quality was to remain with him throughout his career , for whatever else his faults may have been , no one ever slighted James 's desire to win : to win at anything and everything , from backgammon through girls to any sport he ever played .
27 Then we got back together again and I was living with him at his mum 's house .
28 Gerrard was looking at him with his eyebrows slightly raised .
29 His eyes had a wildness about them , as though he might attack the boy , who was looking at him with his mouth open .
30 Young Donald was grinning at him with his new look of mockery .
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