Example sentences of "he [be] [verb] for [pron] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 On this occasion he is posing for us with the ‘ stripper ’ in one of the kilns .
2 I 've phoned the doctor , and he 's arranged for her to be admitted to hospital for observation , or whatever they do .
3 Sure , he 's made some mistakes , but after everything he 's done for us in recent years he must be allowed the odd cock-up .
4 He 's waiting for you at Brown 's Hotel . ’
5 He 's waiting for you at the Burlington airstrip .
6 It 's cos he 's working for him at the moment money .
7 It 's just that he 's coming for it at three so if I get my camera I want it before three .
8 He was prepared for me to Cook The Books
9 He was looking for something along the lines of Jon Voight in Midnight Cowboy , an American from nowhere , and all the actors coming in were doing an Andrew Dice Clay or Billy Idol number .
10 Jackie he was he was looking he was for something and he was looking for something in a hurry and I could n't find out I like T-shirts in one pile sweat shirts in another pullovers in another jeans in another but they were all sort of
11 He was fixed for me in this time , this pose .
12 P. Taylor has noted that Law was trained , if he was trained for anything in his early career , to be a debater .
13 I think about Mr Jackson and I get a sort of uncomfortable feeling when I remember he was waiting for me at the house and I did n't come back .
14 This time he was waiting for me at the table .
15 Jekyll 's servant had received by the same post a letter similar to mine , and he was waiting for me with the locksmith .
16 He was waiting for her in the lounge .
17 No doubt he was waiting for her in the foyer , champing at her non-appearance .
18 He was waiting for her in the hall .
19 He was waiting for them with his barge by the first footbridge over the canal as they came down from the moor .
20 It was a considerable tribute to his growing reputation in high official circles , and the fact that he was proposed for it by Sir John Anderson ( later Viscount Waverley , q.v. ) , then permanent under-secretary at the Home Office , indicates that he already enjoyed the trust of the home departments he would henceforth be serving .
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