Example sentences of "[pers pn] [adv] [vb past] him [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 He was magnificent again at Anfield and I personally thanked him after the game for what he had done . ’
2 In fact , I just saw him in the flesh , bruised as that might be . ’
3 and erm I just stuck him in the bath when we got home
4 He turned and came after me waving his revolver , but I easily lost him in the crowd .
5 I also told him about the new hip and thigh diet and said I could do with some more volunteers to try it out .
6 So tail-waggingly , bone-snafflingly puppyish that I nearly tickled him under the ears .
7 I nearly hit him over the head , I thought it was Jason .
8 He did n't even curl a lip in my direction and he did n't howl when I playfully cuffed him behind the ear .
9 Benjamin carefully extinguished the torches and I almost shoved him through the door , glad to escape from the miasma of the unburied dead .
10 I actually advised him at the meeting that he should not and could n't take that motion , and I was by Alderman in that situation , but he still deemed to go ahead and that 's p his prerogative .
11 He was in hospital for nearly a month , and I never saw him until the day I got out .
12 Thomas was two years younger than I and I never met him till the year I left St. Paul 's School ( 1894 ) .
13 Strange , I never told him about the horrors of Maubisson . )
14 ‘ Then perhaps you do n't mind sharing , the way you once shared him with the little South African girl who was having such a miserable pregnancy when I was there trying to breathe some life into that Johannesburg radio station six years ago . ’
15 He might be the key to her freedom , but she still hated him for the confusion he aroused in her .
16 It was then that she really saw him for the first time and the blood began to sing in her ears .
17 For his own good she frequently reminded him of the horrors and deprivations that would befall him there .
18 But she then took him through the house pointing out china and furniture which he was interested in .
19 She never told him about the phone calls : I think perhaps she thought that might drive him away .
20 She never associated him with the missing lad till she saw the picture .
21 She never invited him to the jolly ones .
22 You never wanted him in the first place . ’
23 ‘ No , ’ she denied confusedly as she reluctantly followed him through the side-door .
24 Tony Soper was Nature 's early-riser and this programme suggested it is something of a habit with him , for we also saw him in the Falklands carrying out an investigation into whether the war — or was it just a conflict ? — had upset the wildlife there .
25 We then hit him over the head with the punt-pole and paddled off out of range of his piteously outstretched hands , cackling demonically as he went down for the third time .
26 It was a wet morning so they just took him to the corner and ran him to the corner of Richmond Row in his bare feet — brought him back — ‘ Put your shoes on ! ’
27 This time there was no knife , they just got him on the floor and it was just a fist which had come down on the man 's face again and again .
28 Item that Richard Curteys of Battle … entered the liberty of this lordship and made an assult on Richard Knyght against the peace by night ; and with a strong hand , with force and arms , to wit , with swords , bows and arrows , they unjustly took him outside the aforesaid lordship and carried him off to Battle , within the liberty and town of the abbot of Battle , against the peace .
29 They also enrolled him in the Skoda Owners ' Club , complete with badge and sticker .
30 One was new and had come instead of his uncle who was ill , but the guards would not let him in because they did not know him by sight and they nearly threw him into the ditch before they would even let him go home .
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