Example sentences of "the [noun] he [vb -s] the [adj] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Off the field he takes the inevitable acclaim and adulation in his stride . |
2 | He refers to reality as Truth and by the use of the term he preserves the metaphysical and ethical connotation of such traditional Hindu terms as dharma , universal law or duty , and ta , the cosmic moral law . |
3 | After all , if he does n't like the future he has the personal possibility — and responsibility of moving to another outfit whose potential he thinks is greater . |
4 | Once it is made clear that the judge makes new law in these circumstances , as conventionalism insists , then it seems plausible that he should choose the rule he believes the actual legislature then in power would choose , or , failing that , the rule he believes best represents the will of the people as a whole . |
5 | ‘ ( 1 ) A person is guilty of an offence if — ( a ) he does any act which causes an unauthorised modification of the contents of any computer ; and ( b ) at the time when he does the act he has the requisite intent and the requisite knowledge . |
6 | After a thorough summary of the evidence he reaches the following conclusions : |
7 | His playing is thoughtful and warm , generally responsive to the music 's nature ; and he can turn a phrase charmingly , as with the melancholy ‘ October ’ and in the flexible lines of the central con grazia section of ‘ April ’ ( though at the start he strums the off-beat chords rather casually ) . |
8 | In the silence he feels the smooth operations of the mind 's incomparable picture show . |
9 | The progress of this relationship is n't altogether clear but at the end of the book he describes the Italian male lover as a ‘ sleepy tomcat ’ and Vittoria 's life as subject to frequent phases of ‘ wailing neck biting followed by complacent indifference ’ from such men . |
10 | Mandela is free he 's out of prison he can address the British parliament , the United States congress , the parliaments of the world he addresses the whole world through television when we held those concerts for him at |
11 | Dot 's part in the affair leads John to suspect her unjustly of infidelity , but in the end he learns the true explanation . |
12 | The feeling is represented through his perception of objects , through the way he sees the outside world . |
13 | Well , so we do , about Handel and the way he makes the best effect ( at least on us ) ; but a different kind of historical awareness is needed here , one that puts us into the frame of mind of late eighteenth-century Vienna and its perception of Handel . |
14 | Furthermore , in his continued discussion of the problem in Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego he likens the manic state to festivals such as the Roman Saturnalia , ‘ which owe their cheerful character to the release which they bring ’ . |