Example sentences of "[pers pn] [verb] [prep] [pron] [prep] his " in BNC.

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1 And er we 'll have given it him I mean on his on his total cost he 'll be down .
2 So I rode with him to his castle in Dunbar , and stayed there two weeks .
3 I 've called back into his mind the spells I put on him at his birth .
4 I recently discovered the answer to these questions from Willie Lamont , as I talked to him about his approach to history .
5 I sent for him to his private address as soon as I got the news but he has to get up from Winchester . ’
6 I have reviewed it , and I said : I agree with everything except his relativism .
7 I agree with you on his ambiguity and the danger of flirting with such issues — you 're not telling him what to write but , being an idol to many fans , he has to have sense of responsibility .
8 Of course it 's not actually coffin-shaped , but that 's how Tony Hicks of the Hollies , who used an original Phantom XII on a number of the band 's hits ( including Look Through Any Window and I Ca n't Let Go ) referred to the guitar when I spoke to him about his original guitar .
9 Earlier this afternoon I spoke to him about his party 's ailing fortunes in the year since the General Election .
10 And once when I was very little I sat with him on his horse-drawn dray at the station with him in his bowler hat .
11 THE NEXT DAY , fourteen roses were planted in the snowbanks outside the Polytechnique with a card in Gothic script which read : Father , in the name of your son I pray to you on his behalf .
12 While it 's true that nobody does any work in The Possessed except delivering babies , and true also that Stepan Verkhovensky flowers into a veritable presiding genius of sloth in the guise of footling bustle , nevertheless the reader 's heart is not with Mrs Stavrogin , Stepan 's patroness , when she hisses at him on his deathbed ‘ you futile , futile , ignoble , chickenhearted , always , always futile man ’ .
13 He had then suggested she come with him to his house to help unload .
14 ‘ Naylor , ’ she turned to him with his name on her lips , oddly , his pain her pain at that moment .
15 She walked with him to his carriage , the reckless high-perch phaeton she had seen often enough outside the Fleece , his horse held now by a wizened little urchin quite blue with cold , to whom he tossed a coin .
16 She glanced from him to his wife .
17 Of course Alison was not ‘ living in ’ the house , but was often there visiting Patrick ( her help as a nurse was no longer required ) , joining Jack in his studio ( where she talked with him about his work ) , or chatting with him and Franca in the drawing room or kitchen before departing with Jack to a restaurant and taking him on to her flat for the night .
18 He had liked the way she laughed at him in his old man 's vice .
19 ‘ Not a lady to keep a man waiting , ’ he murmured approvingly , and , basking in his appreciation of her promptitude , she went with him to his car and , as he set the Mercedes in motion , had time to realise that she was n't shy , for goodness ' sake .
20 She sat opposite him in his office with the door firmly closed .
21 We talk to him in his language and we have tried to lift as much of the experience from his mind as we can so that it does n't fester , get covered over , then burst out in 10 years time and turn him into a disturbed child .
22 The Joker is a very intelligent horse and knows his ‘ covering bridle ’ which we use on him for his studwork , or his ordinary bridle when he is ridden , and behaves accordingly .
23 This form of prayer , then , gathers up all our experiences and takes them to the King of Kings , and we think about them in his presence — all the hurts , all the joys , all that stops us becoming the kind of persons we feel called to be .
24 She could feel them coming towards her from his eyes and his smile , but they were different now , quieter , triumphant .
25 To feel him touching her , to see him looking at her with his heart washed clean of all the old hatred .
26 One of his body squires heard him whispering about it to his Gascon favourite . ’
27 He was very frightened of the spirits and they ran after him in his dreams .
28 Now he laid about him in his denunciations of England 's political leaders and institutions .
29 He stabbed at it with his talons and beak .
30 Then he searched out the little hard protruding button that was the energy of her sex , he stabbed at it with his tongue , felt her respond quickly , then urgently .
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