Example sentences of "[noun sg] he [verb] the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Some might worry that he is allowing the Californians to influence him too much , but I ca n't help feeling that so long as he manages to stay on his horse he remains the best sort of Englishman aborad .
2 His new house , built of hammer dressed limestone , with Westmorland slates for the roof , abutted on to the remains of the original house which he made into a service wing , and on the south side he made the grand entrance .
3 In an experiment he taught the same period to two groups .
4 As a consequence of this initial perception he felt the general awareness of all staff had to be built — and built rapidly .
5 mummy he had the last cherry bakewell
6 After all , if he does n't like the future he has the personal possibility — and responsibility of moving to another outfit whose potential he thinks is greater .
7 In The Form of Living he charts the sacramental understanding at the heart of the Mass , as a whole way of life and perceived growth in consciousness ; his Meditations on the Passion engage with different stages of such growth and , indeed , are designed to act as catalysts for its progress .
8 He was returned to the Bocardo Jail , from whose roof he watched the painful death by burning of Latimer and Ridley .
9 As a result he joined the Royal Manor of Portland Athletics Club and has since run in several races for the club in the Dorset Road Racing League , although he has yet to catch up with his friend Tony Coleman from B40 Workshop !
10 In the , in the current Middle East erm so this pattern certainly applies to Judaism , not to all religions , he 's not saying that all religions have to undergo persecution in order to as it were flourish , but some religions do and perhaps the characteristic Judaism or at least this kind of monotheism is these kind of religions tend to be intolerant and single-mindedly , tend to say that we know the truth , everybody else is wrong and consequently they tend to persecute others and get persecuted and this leads to these periods of suppression , but there 's a tendency for this kind of return of repress just as Mike was saying , his very brilliant analogy he suggested the French Revolution when the students put the barricade up in the same place or so the erm Freud 's idea is that the things that happened in that first traumatic period back in Ancient Egypt and for example erm he said this is why the modern erm Jews insist on circumcision because the Ancient Egyptians did and this is , this is correct .
11 For this ceremony he chose the beautiful pleasure garden of Shalimar , about five miles north of Old Delhi .
12 Flight lieutenant Fraser Boyd does n't like heights ; With that in mind he hopes the final adjustments he 's making in dock in Plymouth will render a return visits unnecessary while half way across the Atlantic .
13 Mr McNally : ‘ Is it correct that on each and every interview he denied the two charges ? ’
14 Once it is made clear that the judge makes new law in these circumstances , as conventionalism insists , then it seems plausible that he should choose the rule he believes the actual legislature then in power would choose , or , failing that , the rule he believes best represents the will of the people as a whole .
15 In effect he adopted the same methods to deal with worsening financial crises over the 1960s .
16 Cutting across country in the morning light he saw the Japanese transports moored peacefully in Dili harbour .
17 With skill borne of long practice he let the old man talk but guided his talk in the way he wanted it to go , then he started to ask questions .
18 With a skilful lurch he gave the bent hydrant on the sidewalk a crunchy shouldercheck and we were off , weaving at speed back up the street .
19 After lunch he formed the Italian habit of taking a siesta and he went to bed early .
20 Through the carved window he saw the wet branches of the evergreens , darker on the dark .
21 Then , turning away to look out of the small , square window he delivered the cruellest cut of all : " Specially when she 's second best . "
22 At the bottom he found the three letters CIS and asked what it was .
23 ‘ ( 1 ) A person is guilty of an offence if — ( a ) he does any act which causes an unauthorised modification of the contents of any computer ; and ( b ) at the time when he does the act he has the requisite intent and the requisite knowledge .
24 With a tiny shudder he passed the hard knot of tension from him then looked up again , a faint smile at the corners of his mouth .
25 At yesterday 's investiture he joined the newly-knighted television presenter Sir David Frost , the sports commentator David Coleman , also an OBE , and the Olympic swimmer Sharron Davies , who was invested as an MBE .
26 Faced with that counter-attack , Murray stubbornly refused repeated appeals to simply say under which Law he took the unprecedented action .
27 Shoving his hands into the pockets of his overcoat he felt the little box that contained the tie pin .
28 By way of assistance he gave the following example :
29 Nearer home he recalls the late Gordon Coe 's 50 years at Evenwood , Harry Brown 's near lifetime service to Shildon and generations of the Fairbairn family then as now helping football survive at Tow Law .
30 With 2,500 hours in his Cessna 414 Chancellor he felt the 1950s Magister to be within his capabilities , being small and strong with simple systems , twin engines , reasonable speeds , manual controls and the straightforward handling of an almost-straight wing .
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