Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] he [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 The postman eventually found him canvassing on the High Row and handed over the State secrets there and then ‘ I was very impressed , ’ says Fallon .
2 What right has he to comment on the ‘ quality of fans ’ at the Levellers gigs ?
3 What right has he to comment on the ‘ quality of fans ’ at the Levellers gigs ?
4 Surveying the results of her handiwork , she stayed only long enough to see him scrabble for the safety of the bank .
5 No employer will willingly train a craftsman only to see him go down the road to work for another employer who has invested nothing in training .
6 Keen mountaineer Thomas Hargreaves , 39 , left to go on a day 's hiking in an area frequented by grizzly bears last Thursday , but friends only reported him missing at the weekend .
7 Congratulations to Mr Howard Bloody Wilkinson , not only has he presided over the transfer of David Batty , the sale of the League to the scum but he now seems intent on pissing off Rocky .
8 That way if one of the midfield does do themselves a mischief Rocky will have had some games at least ( I 'd rest Strachan personally to keep him going for the League campaign — which IMO is our best chnace of a European place [ we 're too unlucky in the cups ] ) .
9 And so saying he went into the tiny village police station with its distinctive blue lamp and the lettering chiselled into the stone above the doorway which said ‘ King 's Magnum Parva Police Station ’ .
10 It only added to the team Renault-Williams ' total embarrassment at carelessly letting him go at the peak of his box office appeal and pulling power .
11 ‘ Though of course there was also that long leave he had towards the end of the war . ’
12 South West appointed the finance director only to have him vetoed by the Government on the grounds that he was caught up in a Department of Trade and Industry investigation .
13 Not only did he vote against the proposals but asked that his objections be publicly recognised .
14 He brought you back here , and you stayed with him long enough to get him to part with the doge 's ring … ’
15 ‘ How long did he spend at the estate ? ’
16 When occasions have occurred , as they do in all organizations , where it is necessary to take a ‘ big ’ risk on a young man whose experience and background we think inadequate for the task , nine times out of ten not only does he rise to the occasion but he does even better than we would expect .
17 The thought sobered Rory slightly , but not enough to stop him going for the gun .
18 If you kick a child all his schooldays , force him to labour sixteen hours a day seven days a week , yank out his teeth with forceps when they ache , bleed him when he is ill , beat him throughout his apprenticeship , starve him when he falls on bad times , and finally let him die in the workhouse when he ages prematurely , then you have educated a man , in the best way possible , to be indifferent .
19 Just imagine him standing by the side of you , with his hands crossed before him in a Miss Mollyish style , his intended bow half a courtsey , his fat arms and legs assisting , as in duty bound ; his side glances at you every ten seconds , while he softly , sweetly and insinuatingly informs you — that he has made the arts his peculiar study for the last eight years , and that he flatters himself , by his unremitting study he has greatly contributed to their improvement ; that he came to Ambleside for that purpose ( 't is a great big lie — he came solely to get a living for himself and family , but he is too proud to acknowledge this ) and hopes that the time has been employed with equal advantage to the arts and to himself . ’
20 I just hope he stays off the gear and we can get straightened out .
21 Just stop him falling down the road .
22 We are all ’ — he swung his hand comprehensively , to take in the audience , the studio staff , somehow implying he took in the watching millions too — ‘ we are all worried by what we have heard of your work .
23 Just watch him go in the 200 metres .
24 If he did n't like you , he 'd let you know it — just like he did with the drama teacher .
25 How the hell can they say only when he fucking hear him coming down the stairs !
26 It was no use arguing with Smith , he 'd just have him dropped from the team .
27 ‘ Never mind , Piper , get your kilt on and get over there fast , or you will soon hear him bellowing throughout the area. ,
28 Quick thinking on the part of the father will soon have him sprinting after the runaway , and similarly quick thinking on the part of the camera operator will result in a cut from the distant child to one of the rescuer as he sets off .
29 Before the trial , the Sunday Times had just asked him to pose for the fashion pages of their magazine , wearing tough-guy togs .
30 The loyal voter may have voted consistently out of party principle , or because ties of dependence persistently obliged him to defer to the wishes of committed partisans amongst the local elite .
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