Example sentences of "[art] [adj] [noun pl] [prep] [noun] he " in BNC.

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1 Why , I asked , did he find it acceptable for an artist to have to put up with the paltry sums of money he offered when he himself lived in such style ?
2 Today , Alexei is pale , tires easily and has frequent colds and infections but , despite the continual doses of radiation he receives in the food he eats , the water he drinks , he is still in reasonable health .
3 When Arthur Wellesley was in command of the British troops in Spain he refused to pay for their upkeep by pillage and plunder .
4 Jeff went to the psychiatrist and they start babbling on saying about the forty milligrams of valium he 's taking .
5 However , even when the dinner was over , their ‘ guests ’ showed no sign of leaving , at which point the Emperor began to pull on the ends of his moustache — one of the few signs of irritation he ever allowed himself .
6 Athelstan promptly refused , for the few mouthfuls of ale he had already drunk bit at his stomach .
7 Among the Dark Elves of Naggaroth he is known as the Reaper , to the Goblins of Red-Axe Pass he is Orcbane , and to the north the Norse know him as Mankiller .
8 In the early days of aviation he made designs for aeroplanes and , later in life , he took up golf and planned houses for himself and his friends in Berkshire .
9 Years in which Creggan had matured , his wings bigger now and darker ; years to grow tired of the teachings of old Minch and bitter that the early hopes of freedom he had had were gone .
10 Now he was not only unable to remember the names of politicians , sportsmen and television personalities , he also found his memory was unable to supply the personal details of people he had known since he was a child .
11 Over the following days between attacks he managed to pen his brilliant fifteen-page paper called " On the Tendency of Varieties to Depart Indefinitely from the Original Type " , and mailed it to Darwin , whom he had never met , with shy requests for his comments .
12 The soup came and with it the three bottles of beer he had ordered .
13 At length Zen lazily drew out of his pocket the three items of mail he had collected from the Questura .
14 He reached the hollow of her throat , passion alarmingly evident in his half-closed eyes and in the little groans of pleasure he was giving .
15 And you had best be grateful to me , for if you had left it to the little men of law he could buy better and shiftier than you , and you would never have got your money at all . ’
16 Terrible neuralgic pains which troubled him throughout this period were the mirror of his inward distress , and the large doses of laudanum he took to relieve his symptoms , a portent for the future .
17 There he is into the moving of earth as well as mortar : having repaired the house , he constructs a vista culminating in a ‘ pretty alcove ’ of his own design , thus providing a prospect to view through the large panes of glass he has let into his lattices ( he disapproves of the new fashion for sash-windows ) .
18 To the frockcoated bankers at Coutts he was a welcome asset in the account of a perennially trying customer .
19 Herodotus has long been regarded as a mythographer as much as a historian , for he records not just the bare facts , but the multiple versions of events he has gathered from a variety of sources .
20 After a long deliberation by the jury , Mr Dodd was cleared of wilfully avoiding tax on the considerable sums of money he had hidden , but had to pay large amounts of tax considered owing , as well as legal costs .
21 When I told Robins of the effort it must have required to transport the heavy materials by hand he just laughed .
22 Eventually he was referred to a consultant who took a careful case-history and wondered if there might be some connection between the heavy doses of antibiotics he had received as a young man and the continuing diarrhoea .
23 One of the first bits of advice he gave the First Church was , ‘ Bend the knee , but not unwisely . ’
24 One of the first pieces of music he bought then was Stravinsky 's Firebird .
25 After the Southern Uplands of Scotland he had had to pass near to another industrial city and one quite as grim and dark as the others he had seen .
26 The introduction to medieval and Renaissance literature that appeared some months after his death as The Discarded Image ( 1964 ) , based on the accumulated notes of lectures he had given for decades in Oxford and Cambridge , deals sympathetically with authors who , as he approvingly remarks , quote Homer and Hesiod ‘ as if they were no less to be taken into account than the sacred writers ’ ; and the break in the European spirit he saw as a consequence of the seventeenth-century scientific revolution is magnified here , in a sweeping argument , far beyond the familiar classroom shift from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance .
27 Vet , Bill Stuart says it was one of the worse cases of starvation he 'd ever seen .
28 Now he sits on a therapy group helping the same types of people he used to lock up .
29 Applying these notions to the particular contracts in question he decided that the solus system was both too recent and too variable for it to have become part of the " accepted machinery " .
30 The self-confidence inspired by his Eton and Trinity background may have helped him in the several differences of opinion he has encountered in his life .
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