Example sentences of "same [noun sg] he " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 After about eight issues he picked up a copy and noticed that Bowart-using the same technique he had used to appoint Miles London correspondent — had appointed him , and William Randolph Hearst as editors .
2 But then , as if in that same instant he had solved the puzzle , he spoke .
3 It had happened at the rampart by Dr Dunstaple 's house where Cutter had just shot a sepoy the moment before and seen him fall ; at the same instant he had caught sight of another sepoy levelling his musket and had said to the Sikh beside him : " See that man aiming at me , take him down . "
4 At the same instant he glimpsed a flutter of movement in one of the downstairs rooms .
5 In that same instant he saw the menace he faced .
6 In the same instant he was yelling a warning .
7 In the same Parliament he urged the consideration of precedents for the king 's blocking of the petition on religion .
8 The same afternoon he took tea with Louise de Chavigny in the pale grey and rose pink salon of her house in the Faubourg St-Germain .
9 Later the same afternoon he claimed cutlass , E4 6b which follows the grooved arête left of Sgian Dubh before finishing up the crackline right of The Peeler .
10 Another time in the same club he turned to me and said , ‘ The fellow on my other side went up the Irrawaddy in 1943 and he 's been taking me back there with him .
11 On recovery , Mr Hayden described the stranger to the porter who agreed that it was the same figure he had seen .
12 He steered the ten-year-old Daimler under the Dersingham arch and drove straight into the cathedral close at the same speed he 'd used to cover the miles from Oldfield .
13 A leading pluralist exponent , Nelson Polsby , ‘ is guilty … of the same fault he himself has found with elitist methodology …
14 He said nothing , forked another fish , swallowed it with the same indifference he might appropriate to putting out the rubbish .
15 For the same outlay he could have hired 120 childminders at £2 an hour or ten secretaries at £25 an hour .
16 It was the same question he had asked of her on the Ridgery , a question that put the burden of leadership on her .
17 Dixon 's mention of clothes had pulled his mind back to the discovery of Kemp 's body , and he asked Lewis much the same question he had asked Max , receiving much the same answers .
18 He was not utterly Reverend for a start : he kept bees , but he also boxed , ruggered and rowed with the same poise he showed as a raconteur .
19 Evenly she said , in the same undertone he had used : ‘ All is very well with me , my lord . ’
20 He did it again when , leaving her question hanging , he stepped closer , studied her scraped-back hairstyle , then , without so much as a by-your-leave , whipped her glasses from her nose — the better , it seemed , to check that her green eyes were the same green he had looked into during the early hours of Sunday morning .
21 In the same vein he wrote to the papal legate in 1095 :
22 And yet in the same lecture he had expressed his belief that the tradition of which he spoke was drawing to a close ; and , in the poem , the encounter with the familiar but only half-glimpsed figure is charged with a sense of transitoriness and loss :
23 Although Nizan 's writings of the period are suffused with acerbic communist ideology , although he was chosen as communist party candidate in Bourg-en-Bresse for the general election of 1932 , although he participated fully in the Universite Ouvriere from its opening in 1932 , during the same period he was also involved in finalising his bourgeois education ( 1927–9 ) , he was also a philosophy teacher at the Lycee Lalande in Bourg-en-Bresse ( 1931–2 ) .
24 During the same period he clearly became involved in royal service , for in 1250 he acted for Henry III at the papal curia in securing the confirmation of the highly controversial election to the bishopric of Winchester of Aymer de Valence [ q.v. ] , the king 's half-brother , and then , in the next year , he was appointed the king 's proctor at the papal curia .
25 That very same evening he appeared on the bandstand in Woodford Square and gave his first speech under the auspices of the P.E.M. The speech turned out to be nothing less than a vitriolic attack on the Commission , which he portrayed as an organisation run by ‘ hide- bound conservatives in the British Colonial service ’ .
26 On the same evening he had been admitted to hospital with heart trouble , but although his condition was reported to be good the next day , he did not withdraw his candidacy .
27 Thirdly , the night Falconer died , Dacourt tasted the same wine he drank . ’
28 Having doubts about this picture 's authenticity and surmising that it might be the same picture he had seen several years before , he again sought my opinion on the basis of a good photograph .
29 At the same moment he became aware that Mrs Willmot was talking about Helen .
30 At the same moment he made stabbing movements , at shoulder height , with the bat .
  Next page