Example sentences of "[v-ing] him [adv] [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 He grappled with Slatter , tearing him away from the motionless body .
2 Rocastle got a page long interview expressing some puzzlement at Wilko keeping him out of the first team .
3 If she was n't , he slipped into her mind , the memory of her response to him both torment and humiliation , and dislodging him once he entered her thoughts proved far more difficult than keeping him out in the first place .
4 In spite of his explanations they 'd insisted on signing him out at the little cabin , and he 'd snatched the case out of his car and run back , wondering why it always rained .
5 The Scot said : ‘ I was one punch away from knocking him out in the fifth and if I had n't been injured , I would have finished him . ’
6 Manville knew then that Hayman had been right in writing him off as a washed-up veteran .
7 The 34-year-old former Liverpool and Blackburn star has been unable to fix himself up with another club since the summer , but the Robins ' boss is lining him up for a reserve game against Walsall next week .
8 The wrong turns provide additional boundaries and constraints as the exercise proceeds , leading him ultimately to the same goal .
9 She had not killed him , she was leading him away from the open mouth of the cave and towards the distant city .
10 It was a trick , leading him back into the same old treadmill .
11 It also gestures towards excusing him , presenting him throughout as a pathetic , historically unaware , exploited and manipulated individual .
12 In The Desert Rats as the young English captain who put paid to that upstart Rommel by turning him back at a crucial moment in the whole North African Campaign ( set in Palm Springs ) , he was fine .
13 ‘ I know what a hotel is , ’ she snapped , pulling him outside into the fresh air , ‘ but — ’
14 And wished he had n't because , two weeks later , Donald was holding him up with a sawn-off shotgun for an hour and a half .
15 It was now obvious that the horse was a stayer and yet Harry Short 's stable jockey had recently ridden him as if his best distance was six furlongs , holding him up for a late run .
16 Rough hands gripped him by his crotch and the back of his neck , holding him aloft like a defenceless struggling insect tipped on to its back .
17 No wonder they 're sending him over to the mad house for th ’ electric . ’
18 The Army had taught him that , too , and the SAS acceptance tests had rammed the lesson home by sending him out over the damp Brecon Beacons with a 55-lb Bergen rucksack knowing he had to cover a certain distance in a certain time but not knowing that when he had done it , there would n't be the trucks they had promised but a vague assur-ance of a cup of tea if he kept on marching a few more miles in that direction .
19 Then he heard her , calling him softly from the far side of the pagoda .
20 Switching the engine off , he leaned over and kissed her again , and this time she was waiting for him , kissing him back with an inner longing .
21 When the balance is correct then you just sit and ride forward with your legs closed gently round the horse riding him up to a soft contact on the reins .
22 The alternatives would seem to be handing General Noriega to the US forces to face trial on drug-trafficking charges , which the Vatican has said it will not do , or giving him up to the new Panamanian Government , which has already declared it ‘ has enough on him to put Noriega away for life ’ .
23 ‘ I need to see Mr Patterson , ’ I said as if I was letting him in on a big secret .
24 The subtler of the recent readings of the Shipman 's Tale keeps the merchant in the position of target figure by treating him not as a realistic character , but as a functional one : a figure representing the interplay of more abstract themes and factors affecting human life .
25 He hooks his leg forward and sweeps his opponent to the ground , finishing him off with a reverse punch to the head .
26 Formatting to the rear of the Rallye , Legg established radio contact , and gently eased Anderson through a series of power adjustments and manoeuvres to make a practice approach at Cardiff before bringing him around for a successful , damage- and injury-free landing .
27 The president had silenced the vociferous strike-leader by bringing him on to the ruling body .
28 The subject of this exasperated thought sent him a look of enquiry , bringing him back to the present debate .
29 shrugging him close as a second skin
30 Studying him now , dispassionately , without the emotional blindness of the aftermath of her accident , or the initial shock of finding that he was last night 's rescuer , it was like seeing him properly for the first time …
  Next page