Example sentences of "and [vb -s] him [prep] [art] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 This corkscrews the opponent backwards over his supporting leg and dumps him on the mat .
2 Yet though the witches bring his already existing ambition out they can not be completely blamed for his downfall and degeneration as it this , his own ambition which eventually takes him over and turns him into a psychopath , killing merely out of feeling and without reason .
3 When the nest is complete the female approaches the male and nudges him in the flank to gain his confidence .
4 The Chinese believe that to stand on one leg while kicking with the other unbalances the practitioner and places him at a disadvantage .
5 His abolition of the subject carries with it the demise of the individual as the locus of knowledge and agency , and places him in a position where , as we saw , there can be no question of compromise with individualism .
6 She sees through his unctuous manners to his black-hearted designs , and shoots him on the spot , but it too late , and she is surrounded by Kuomintang forces .
7 The lion immediately jumps on him and forces him to the ground .
8 His business licenses him to fraternise with the enemy and casts him in the role of a Microsoft independent software developer-come-OEM , complete with an early access copy of Microsoft NT .
9 Next to the circumcision ceremony , this is the most important event in a young Jewish boy 's life , and invests him with a measure of maturity as well as a commensurate sense of responsibility .
10 Even when he makes mistakes he does it in a way that still brings results and takes him over the gain line .
11 and takes him from the hospital up to Southwold .
12 The ideal of land registration is that a government office , after investigating the title , enters the applicant upon the register as owner , and furnishes him with a certificate in accordance with the entry ; the entry is conclusive as to his right , and no further investigation of the previous title can subsequently be necessary .
13 We then see the goal , hopeful chip into the box , Rush attempts to take it to one side on the half volley with Fairclough bearing down , misses it completely , flies up and hits him in the shoulder .
14 She rescues him , drives him out of town as dawn starts to break and leaves him in a wheatfield .
15 The most vital rule , the rule never to be broken , the rule which marks the true Arab and lifts him above the morass of intrigue and materiality which now dominates his world and indeed ours , is the rule of hospitality .
16 He stuffs his pistol into the top of his trousers , tilts one of the two heavies back onto the rear chairlegs and drags him out the door , clumping down the steps to the gloom outside .
17 A tug on it sounds a buzzer in the driver 's cab and brings him to a halt .
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