Example sentences of "[coord] he [vb mod] [verb] [adv prt] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Now assuming he knows what four times two is and assuming he knows what two plus one is and so on , he may come up with the answer ‘ Nine ’ , or he may come up with the answer ‘ Twelve ’ , and they 're both right .
2 Darius will either stay up to gawp at them , or he 'll curl up in bed and try to sleep .
3 the hon. Member for Hemsworth ought to be more careful in his support for Boycott , or he will fall out with many of his own right hon. and hon. Friends .
4 Or he could come down with you on Saturday ?
5 Shall I go and sit him there , by the fire or He 'd go out without the !
6 I might , for Phil , for Phil to wind down , he 'll come in , say we 've been out for a meal or whatever , he 'll come in and he 'll sit down in front of the television .
7 I watch him at PAs and he 'll go up to screaming girls and undo his tunic and twist his nipple right in a girl 's face .
8 because he can read the first two books , now how they 'll do it with him , he 'll have to just look at the pictures and he 'll go back to square one , and I 've had him actually writing his words , doing letter formation , A , B , C , D
9 Duke Michael will hear and he 'll run out of his room — straight into the hands of Sapt !
10 bother I 've ever had with him , and he goes on to it and away he goes and he 'll come back in the house and he 'll go up the stairs to the computer , and that 's his life .
11 And he 'll put up with being stroked as well .
12 And he may turn up at any moment with a simple explanation , and wonder what we 've been worrying about . ’
13 He then proposed his new plan : that his mother should go back home , and he would continue on to Paris when the weather improved , together with Wendling , Ramm and the bassoonist Ritter .
14 Not the clothes for cross-country , and he would stand out like a beacon on the fringes of the villages and collectives that he must circle like a fox coming to the dustbins for food .
15 But he told me to think upon it and he would come back for an answer . ’
16 And he would run down to the canal , leap into the water , and splash and frolic to his heart 's content .
17 I think the fare in later years was half a crown return , and he would park up near the Post Office , so that people could come and leave their shopping with him instead of humping it about the streets .
18 DMITRY 'S FATHER HAD A GLOBE , and he would point out to Dmitry the different countries and continents , and would make young Dmitry memorise the names of their capital cities .
19 ‘ He was mad on motorbikes and he would tear around on that wasteland near the railway , bent on killing himself , I 'd say .
20 The hon. Member for Leeds , Central will recognise those words , and he should own up to them .
21 And you just walked through the street and he 'd carry on by .
22 There was no sort of law against erm employing people without a certain amount of rest and erm that was employed , er that was occupied that office from first thing in the morning when the bus went out from five o'clock and erm he would , the depot clerk would go off round about dinner time , there 'd be his relief who came on at nine o'clock and worked with him until dinner time and he 'd carry on till five and then we had , what was called , the cashiers come on duty then , there was a cashier and erm a hand .
23 He used to come into the shop after a little while and he 'd go back in the kitchen again and he 'd come back again later on .
24 I 'd stare at him and he 'd stare back at me and it made me want to shoot myself .
25 And er , then he would carry all your goods in , in , I used to think it was wonderful how he managed to pick them all up in his arms and he 'd walk round to the next counter where your other , you had your other dry goods you see , your tea and sugar and your fruit and er then it would all be totted up together .
26 Well it was a town then but since then it 's been made a city , you see , and I got to know all kinds of people and one gentleman came in there , used to come every evening and write a book and er , I used to look after him if I happened to be that end and er , you see , and then he 'd say , oh just an exchange you know about the weather and just in general thing and then I 'd leave him and he 'd get on with his writing and one day he said to me .
27 He subsequently er went to work at the Berlick in latter years and , and this man was just sweeping-up at the Berlick and I could n't believe it cos he was so high up in the technology in the war and he 'd be a dental mechanic and he 'd come down to just being a sweeper-up , and he used to show me the pay packets he 'd got in the war and you know it was fantastic money even , even by today 's standards this is going back fifteen years
28 We just used to play at weekends and he 'd drive down from Manchester !
29 And he 'd run up to you and bark , you know and er he was playing but she did n't realise .
30 A lot of the time she just seemed to forget that he was there , and he 'd shamble along behind her just happy to stay close . ’
  Next page