Example sentences of "he [verb] [pn reflx] to [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 I think there was a driving need in him to push himself to the limits , and there was a purity in the desert and in the Arabs as a race which appealed to him . ’
2 From a sitting position he rubbed and thumped the leg until it responded sufficiently for him to drag himself to the bathroom .
3 Walking to the far end of the cells passage , he lowered himself to the floor until he was sitting with his back to the wall facing the door with its broken lock hanging askew .
4 Over the next eight years he applied himself to the development and perfection of the colour printing process which brought him international fame .
5 The point is that Knighton , for all the ludicrous exhibitionism with which he announced himself to the Stretford End , decided to withdraw , despite evidence that he could indeed finance the original deal .
6 He propelled himself to the ledge with minimal protection — being too knackered to stop and place anything better — and arrived in a sweating heap , to the knowing grins of the rockstars .
7 Barnard inherited a large fortune from his father : over a period of fifty years he devoted himself to the formation of a collection of prints , drawings , and paintings , becoming one of the foremost connoisseurs of his day .
8 He helped himself to a glass of mango juice before he replied .
9 ‘ So he went down , ’ said Frome , as if puzzling it out , ‘ and he helped himself to the headmaster 's sherry . ’
10 But Christmas over , he reapplied himself to the lute and managed to complete it .
11 Yesterday he played himself to a world cup spot , more consentrated and on the alert then ever .
12 However , when he surrenders himself to the moods and atmospheres of the hills , something authentic comes through :
13 He believed the Lord could and would save him , and he committed himself to the Lord and trusted him to save him .
14 There was no sense in which he " slowed down " , however , and in fact he compared himself to a travelling Sherlock Holmes .
15 At lunch-time he addressed himself to the kitchen cupboards and the refrigerator and was touched , though not surprised , at how spartan was the fare that Pooley allowed himself .
16 More than any other wartime figure he addressed himself to the conscience of middle-class radicalism , arguing that the only worthwhile victory possible was one based on the common ownership of the means of production and a moral revolution in which selfishness and the profit motive would give way to an ethic of service to the community .
17 McQueen is happiest in the action sequences such as the exciting ‘ Great Escape ’ from the prison during a concert of French ballet music , and his subsequent flight through the jungle , surviving snakes , crocodiles , Indian blowpipes , and a leper colony until he gets himself to a nunnery and is betrayed by the Mother Superior .
18 When he commits himself to an assignment — be it a poem , a book , a song , or merely aiding a fellow-scribbler 's itch , he does it with gusto — con brio , as he might annotate one of his scores .
19 Steele escaped only weeks ago from Edinburgh prison and turned up in London where he glued himself to the railings at Buckingham Palace to protest his innocence before being re-arrested. escape , Steele telephoned the Daily Record newspaper .
20 Ackroyd 's truest prose occurs when he applies himself to the imitation of ancient and recent writers — a repertoire of others .
21 The eldest , Thomas , was to have ‘ all my books in case he betake himself to the study and practice of physic ’ .
22 He took himself to the call-box in his lodgings night after night , but whether he was sloshed or sober there was no way of finding the nerve to dial .
23 There he brought himself to the notice of George Clifford , the wealthy Amsterdam banker and horticulturist ( see p. 50 ) , who had engaged young Linnaeus as his personal physician and as recorder of his garden plants .
24 He 'll want things to go on just as before , while he helps himself to a share of the takings .
25 Mr Richardson said : ‘ His mother tried to bar him from using the telephone but he connected himself to the line by running a piece of wire under the carpet and soldering it to the telephone terminal . ’
26 v. Wilts U.D. , but he addresses himself to the question and uses his intelligence .
27 He makes it repeatedly clear that he addresses himself to the Greeks who have little knowledge of Roman institutions ; but on the other hand he refers to Roman readers ( 6.5 1 .3–8 ) and is quite obviously looking at them over his shoulder .
28 There is a delightful passage where he addresses himself to the role of dreams and faces out the difficulty inherent in medieval lore which others like Chaucer resolve through ambiguity : namely , that in a situation where some dreams were held to reveal truth and others to be the products of a disordered digestive system , it is difficult to distinguish true from false .
29 Obviously , success in some of those early films had their effect on Wil he promoted himself to a star on the strength of them .
30 Mr Mukhametshin , a 39-year-old Tatar who grew up in the Central Asian republic of Uzbekistan , began in business at 13 when he apprenticed himself to a family of travelling ice-cream makers .
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