Example sentences of "[coord] he [vb -s] [pers pn] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Or he grabs him by the hair , drags back the head , makes the first deep cut .
2 While Blanche tries to pass him in one of the passages he grabs her and he hurts her in the cruellest and most brutal way .
3 And he gets the spade and hits her on the head with it and he goes , I never want to talk to you again and he kicks her in the head .
4 He holds it in his mouth , he picks out a match and he strikes it on the box .
5 There 's this little bent old man with a shopping trolley thing and he bashes it into the back of my legs .
6 Patrick has plenty to say on such subjects , and he says it in the lordly way which does much to furnish the book with its presiding idiom .
7 ‘ Oh , that 's the Eiffel Tower , ’ and he says it in the same tone of voice as if you had shown him a portrait of Grandpa , and he had said : ‘ So that 's your grandfather I 've heard so much about .
8 And of course he goes in and the horse drops in the far side of the wee barn , and er Old goes in with his dram and he dips it into the horse trough you ken , and he turns you ken with his regimental ,
9 His approach , in its essentials , was formed by the early 1930s , and he extends it during the 1940s only in the direction of even greater pessimism : cultural ‘ totalitarianism ’ becomes absolute .
10 I says , ‘ It 's a 7-iron , ’ thinking , ‘ This is where we came in ! ’ , and he hits it through the back of the green .
11 all last week , comes the fucking nice weather and he puts you in the loft .
12 I 'll go and phone him , put ten P in the phone and he rings me at the phone box .
13 There 's one at Kentish Town , a businessman who smokes big fat cigars like this and he 's half finished them and he throws them on the train and when the doors open no-one clears out the way and he steps on and he 's such as bastard
14 And he leaves us with the teasing comment : ‘ Weizmann 's fermentation process with regard to oil works ; but that , for the moment , is all that can be stated .
15 And he instructs us in the way of life !
16 What he has done is describe certain linguistic features of the text which distinguish it from other texts ( he refers to Yeats 's ‘ Phoenix ’ and Tennyson 's , ‘ Morte d'Arthur ’ , as well as instances of non-literary usage ) , and which look as if they may be of some literary significance ; but he leaves it to the literary specialist to determine what the nature of that literary significance is .
17 Oh yes , but he wants them for the whole of the year you see , which is impossible .
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