Example sentences of "[subord] he [vb -s] [pron] in [art] " in BNC.
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1 | a shop-assistant has possession of money paid to him by a customer until he puts it in the till . |
2 | ‘ While you 're speaking to him , I suggest you ask him if he knows anyone in the building trade who would like to come out here to help you . |
3 | Because he has her in the bath with him . ’ |
4 | This is much less often commented upon , probably because he mentions it in a rather throwaway fashion , losing it in a section almost entirely devoted to the argument that noblemen should receive the same punishments as people of the lower orders . |
5 | Such a word may be useful to a literary man but it throws little light on Green 's intentions except when he uses it in a negative sense ; in one chapter he states a subject was ‘ unpicturesque and consequently not worth an artists attention ’ . |
6 | Thus , when he suffers what in the past he would have regarded as a disaster , he can move now into the transcendent and in a few moments compose himself . |
7 | She is told that if she catches sight of him when he visits her in the darkness , he will leave her . |
8 | When he puts you in a sheet of plastic . |
9 | Why do I need him to stay here when he weakens me in the way an earthquake undermines a city ? |
10 | His vital interest was exploring the countryside with his school friend Arthur Hardy , as he records it in A Sportsman 's Tale : ‘ We had spent the best ten years of life together and after that saw one another about twice a year … |
11 | And , as he describes it in a very striking page , suddenly had what he calls a , a very acute sense of unendurable individual loneliness of man , the acute , an acute sense of the pathos of the situation of the human individual , somehow inherently lonely , shut up within himself , undefended , against the blows of fate . |
12 | In fact , thanks largely to Sir Robin Day — ‘ the Grand Inquisitor ’ , as he calls himself in the title of his new book — the impression that the average viewer probably has of politics on television is that it is predominantly adversarial . |
13 | As he puts it in The Problem of Method : ‘ For us the reality of the collective object rests on recurrence . |
14 | Looking at Philip Swallow now , as he seats himself in a low , upholstered chair facing her , Robyn has difficulty in recognizing the jet-set philanderer of Rupert Sutcliffe 's description . |
15 | Time , the best of all doctors , though he kills you in the end , had done more than therapy could and now days would pass , weeks , without Rufus thinking of Ecalpemos at all . |