Example sentences of "[adv prt] [prep] he in [art] [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Down behind him in the straggly little valley , I notice that a few allotments do remain , after all .
2 She smiled down at him in a funny way , stroked his head , touched his cheek with the back of her fingers .
3 Piper may be articulate and polite , but he is genuinely tough and a real threat to Benn — who I believe must get through to him in the first six rounds or face disaster .
4 She was just cursing herself for not having had the courage to go straight over to him in the first place when he appeared again , a little further down .
5 ‘ The Queen is in good health and will not hand over to him in the foreseeable future unless her health suddenly deteriorates .
6 When , in well-cut white satin and glycerine tears , she sobbed , Oh but Daddy I do love him , I do love him , he still tried to reason with her ; but then when he saw her hitching up the satin and running across the lawn , throwing off the veil , scattering the astonished wedding guests as she ran , and when he saw her jumping into a truck , not caring that she was getting petrol stains all over her broderie anglaise , jumping into a truck and not with the man they all expected her to love , but with the one she really loves , and then driving off with him in a cheap pickup truck to a motel in Wisconsin , shouting out , Goodbye Father , Goodbye Father ! as she goes ; well when he saw her doing that then Boy could not bring himself to disapprove .
7 Rebel Ruddock emerged as the players ' spokesman for Venables , speaking up for him in the High Court yesterday , having already slapped in a transfer request to Sugar .
8 Can you give me some idea of erm h how you started up with him in the first place ?
9 Charles caught up with him in the Green Room .
10 His post as chief executive more or less folded up under him in a wholesale shake-up of staff .
11 But maybe it was the way he was looking across at her with those all-seeing predatory jet-black eyes of his , or maybe it was the way she felt just a bit claustrophobic at being shut up beside him in the narrow confines of the car and the desire that sparked in her to have this ordeal over quickly , but all at once an idea popped into her head .
12 She looked up at him in a dazed manner .
13 She looked up at him in a dazed manner .
14 When he closed his eyes , fatigue swam up at him in a mazy spiral , making his head spin as if he were drunk .
15 His own address stared up at him in the same black hand
16 Watch out for him in the second series of The Young Ones when it 's next repeated , making a brief guest appearance as an exploding peasant .
17 This means handicaps are out for him in the immediate future and conditions races will have to be the order of the day on the run-up to Cheltenham .
18 Ye 'd never have got it out of him in a million years .
19 " Ah , hell , what 's the point ? " came out of him in a choking sob , and he put his arm over his face .
20 Relax , ’ he said , drawing her back towards him in the cramped confines of the passage .
21 Throughout most of the history of the Rump he was a close political supporter of Oliver Cromwell , but in 1653 he fell out with him in the complicated debates about the dissolution of the House .
22 As Edward motored down Portsdown Hill , from the George , the harbour stretched out before him in the dying light .
23 The sound of that distraught weeping brought that June afternoon back to him in a stabbing flash of inner pain .
24 For a moment , he thought that his wildest dreams were about to come true : she was staring back at him in a deep , soulful way that he was sure meant love .
25 Curtis then came back at him in the following set , to take a 4–2 lead , but the Nottingham player was swift to respond with a counter-attack , taking the next two games to square the set .
26 Example 4:4 Turnover rent YIELDING AND PAYING THEREFOR by equal quarterly payments in advance on the usual quarter days : ( 1 ) the annual sum of £ ( " the basic rent " ) ; and ( 2 ) such sum as is calculated in accordance with the Schedule hereto ( " the turnover rent " ) SCHEDULE ( 1 ) In this schedule the following expressions have the following meanings : ( a ) " gross turnover " means the aggregate of all sums : ( i ) received by the tenant in return for goods supplied or services rendered in the course of any trade or business carried on by him in the demised property or partly in the demised property and partly elsewhere ; and ( ii ) payable to the tenant by any person in consideration of the use or occupation of the whole or any part of the demised property ( b ) " a rental year " means a period of twelve calendar months beginning on ( c ) " net turnover " means the gross turnover less : ( i ) any sum actually paid by the tenant to HM Commissioners of Customs and Excise by way of VAT or other tax chargeable on the supply of goods or services ; ( ii ) any sum refunded by the tenant to his customers in respect of defective or unsatisfactory goods or services ; ( iii ) per cent of any sums received by the tenant in return for services for which orders are received at the demised property but are performed wholly elsewhere ( d ) " qualified accountant " means a member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales ( 2 ) The turnover rent for a rental year shall be : ( a ) per cent of the net turnover for the year immediately preceding that rental year exceeding £ but less than £ and ( b ) per cent of the net turnover for the year immediately preceding that rental year exceeding £ but less than £ ( 3 ) Within one month after the beginning of each rental year ( time being of the essence ) the tenant shall deliver to the landlord a certificate signed by a qualified accountant of the tenant 's gross turnover and net turnover for the year immediately preceding that rental year .
  Next page