Example sentences of "he at [noun prp] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ I 've seen him at Liverpool in the players ’ lounge .
2 In 675 the Chronicle A ( s.a. 675 ) records that Aescwine , son of Cenfus , one of the kings of the western Saxons , fought him at Biedanheafde .
3 NOW LET'S HEAR IT FOR HIM AT LORD 'S TODAY
4 After tea , Miandad began settling the score with Salisbury , the young legspinner who had dismissed him at Lord 's .
5 There are a bust and a portrait of him at Lord 's .
6 PS I told Nero you 'd meet him at Dover but I should leave your chariot behind he might not understand if you cut him in two , he 's funny that way .
7 He ordered all the Lombard dukes to pay homage to him at Pavia , and from that time onwards was known as ‘ King of the Franks and Lombards , Roman Patrician ’ .
8 I learned of his death when I tried to telephone him at Ladram Avionics .
9 ‘ I had a great uncle who fought under him at Ladysmith . ’
10 That will spare Italy 's World Cup blushes — but it 's bad news for Scotland , their next opponents , who will now have to face him at Ibrox on November 18 .
11 After that Kisling expansively invited all the guests to dinner with him at Leduc 's restaurant .
12 ‘ The extra few days off helped Gough , but it was n't my intention to play him at Aberdeen if the midweek game had been on . ’
13 The decision had cheered him up ; the bustle created by his demands reaffirmed the show of his importance ; and he could still feel a breeze from the pure air which had wreathed him at Hause Point .
14 He later built a chapel for him at Lee on the edge of the Broadlands estate .
15 I would have given much to meet him at Elsfield during one of his fleeting visits : indeed there was no one I would have been more interested to meet .
16 At the Forest Eyre which opened before him at Windsor in September 1632 , counsel for the Crown was Sir William Noy , the Attorney-General , a learned lawyer determined to re-establish Forest rights which had long been forgotten .
17 James Haldane , when seeking the office of bailie of the regality of Lennox from the Duke of Montrose , hoped by that means to ‘ occasion … partys to imploy him at Edinburgh ’ , and doubtless he was not alone in seeing this connection .
18 Skaardal , well recovered from an ankle problem bothering him at Val d'Isere , was 43 hundredths of a second behind Heinzer and Lasse Arnesen , eighth the previous weekend , 52 hundredths from 19th start number .
19 After the 1963 Walker Cup , Michael Bonallack and Joe Carr wrote a letter to Jack Nicklaus nominating me to caddie for him at Lytham .
20 Seddon 's remark that I should n't try to get in touch with him at Scotland Yard set me thinking .
21 ‘ Angus ? ’ he said , but Cameron was looking past him at Allan Stewart , sceptical and intent .
22 Professor Fritz Eloff , the President of the powerful Northern Transvaal Union and Craven 's vice president for 20 years , substituted for him at IRB meetings abroad when Craven 's failing health repeatedly prevented him from attending .
23 The bad news came within a few days ; there was no place available to him at Oxford this year in the Martinmas term .
24 When sentencing him at Oxford Crown Court today , Judge Leo Clarke described it as a motiveless and shocking attack .
25 Well , so I 'm going to meet him at Temple Meads and we 're going to set off to the Marquis family abode .
26 FOLLOWING on from last month 's report on club management ( p79 of September 's RW&P , Jim Saker of Loughborough University Business School , co-author with Sarah Massey , has reminded us that copies of the full report ( price £15 inclusive of postage & packing ) or the synopsis ( £3 ) and information on training workshops can be obtained from him at Loughborough University School .
27 They knew him at McCausland 's , and would treat him reverentially .
28 The bulk of Mar 's forces were still with him at Perth and his total force was now perhaps 10,000 strong ; the Duke of Argyll , in command of George I 's army in Scotland , had no more than 4000 .
29 But startling news awaited him at Naples .
30 ONE OF the doughty pack leaders to emerge in the late 1940's from the Manchester scrum of ‘ palaeomagnetists ’ was S , Keith Runcorn — a former Cambridge engineer with an almost unhealthy liking for the rough and tumble of the rugby field , Keith Runcorn is now professor of physics , and geophysics supremo , at the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne — and incidentally the president of the university 's rugby club , To honour Runcorn 's reaching the age of 60 , the university organised earlier this month a three-day conference on ‘ Magnetism , planetary rotation and convection in the Solar System ’ , Since the Second World War , geology has undergone conceptual upheavals as never before , The apparently ludicrous ideas proposed by Alfred Wegener in the 1920s , that the Earth 's continents were drifting around , have found solid ground , The evidence came from physicists inspired by wartime work on radar , by cosmic-ray research and the discovery that some rotating stars have a magnetic field , The physicists set themselves the task of measuring whether rotating bodies on Earth also produce magnetic fields , The eminent Patrick Maynard Blackett devised a highly sensitive magnetometer for this work , but finding that a spinning gold cylinder produced no magnetic field , turned his machine to measuring rock magnetism , A school of expertise concerned with ‘ fossilised magnetism ’ developed around him at Manchester and later at Imperial College , London , The fruits of such work inspired a reappraisal of continental drift and new theories to explain the mechanisms responsible for moving the continents , and later produced the foundations on which were forged the unifying concepts of plate tectonics and seafloor spreading , Runcorn applies an enormous enthusiasm to all that he takes on — as many past students and editors of various science journals can testify , His first notoriety came with his attempts to determine whether the Earth 's general magnetic field was related to the planet 's rotation , or related to some deep-seated phenomenon , To determine this he took his magnetometer down some of the deep Lancashire coal pits .
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