Example sentences of "[adv] he [vb -s] the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Apparently he says the old ones were totally inadequate . ’
2 In doing so he exposes the pre-acquisition write-down , the timing of recognition of deferred consideration and the impact of disposals .
3 Admittedly Tchakarov is not helped by an opaque and woolly recording that fails to properly focus the orchestra , but even so he misses the raw power and vigour that Fedoseyev finds in his Philips set .
4 Anyway he has the right approach and I 'm sure something will result . ’
5 Now he faces the biggest challenge of his existence — the devil-take-the-hindmost motorways of Bavaria , Austria and Italy .
6 Today he begins the third week of a hunger strike .
7 Well he thinks the only way that modern will accept the rule of one person rather than another is if they think they 're somehow there as a result of their own action , so we 'll only accept the rule of erm our leaders if we think we put them there and we take them back again , we put them there and can recall them and this for Barry is the only merit that contemporary democratic policy democratic erm systems that it allows us to think of our rulers as having some legitimate claim to rule .
8 Not surprisingly he makes the odd enemy .
9 Here he describes the unprecedented amount of sculpture he has found , whose quality demonstrates that the sculptors of Aphrodisias were no mere copyists but artists ofa distinctive school which made a major contribution to ancient art .
10 Here he provides the powerful image of the striding male Anarchist in the entrance hall of the NCCA .
11 When asked to assess the opposition , manager Lazaroni replied diplomatically that he fears no single Italian player , rather he fears the whole side .
12 Sometimes he imagines the little knot of concentration between his father 's eyebrows as he reads the letter aloud , and his mother 's smile hidden behind her hand .
13 It is only late in the day that the weary French King ( Paul Scofield ) gears up his own hostile rhetoric , and then he entrusts the actual campaign to various representatives , the Dauphin , the Constable , Orleans , who cry up only their armour and their horses , and are rhetorically out-ranked even before the battle begins .
14 Surely then he becomes the free man , the wandering spirit , the enjoyer of the limitless life ?
15 Frank and Betty manage to get out and on to the bonnet , then he has the bright idea of removing a bag of manure from the boot .
16 Instead he sees the big idea of this movie : all people are linked by the universal spirit .
17 Karajan himself lives more dangerously than his rivals , taking time to let ideas blossom rather then self-consciously pushing forward , and yet he displays the keenest sense of line .
18 That ‘ strange ’ which would be a lazy gesture in another novelist is indeed strange to the reader , strange as the feline , supremely observed young man himself ; and yet he feels the very muscles and skin-surface of Raskolnikov 's smile — a prelude to the way in which the book 's entire action is simultaneously read about and lived through .
  Next page