Example sentences of "he must [verb] [pron] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 We have got the right Prime Minister and he must lead us into the next election . ’
2 His Prince Hal is never a roaring boy : he sits hunched or sprawled , with dark unwinking eyes : he hopes to be amused by his bully companions , but the eyes constantly muse beyond them into the time when he must steady himself for the crown .
3 If he respects and loves his original … he must liberate it from the boundaries of time , the boundaries of physical change of all sorts , the boundaries of cultural change . "
4 If the Minister is genuinely concerned about maritime safety , he must do something about the massive proposed cuts in the coastguard service .
5 He acknowledges that before a contemplative is ready , like Moses , to climb the mountain , he must prepare himself by the time-honoured Western disciplines of Lectio , Meditatio and Oratio — study of scripture , meditation and prayer — but he tells his readers that other authors will tell them all they need to know about these .
6 We are merely suggesting that if the right hon. Member for Chingford has information he must place it before the appropriate authorities .
7 But Mr Mellor said he must leave it to the people of Torfaen to judge whether that was a proper matter .
8 What he can do is to say that the legal owner can not in conscience , in equity , make use of his Common Law right for his own benefit ; he must use it for the benefit of the man for whom he holds it in trust .
9 If a secured creditor omits to disclose his security in his proof of debt , he must surrender it for the general benefit of creditors unless the court relieves him on the ground that omission was inadvertent or the result of honest mistake ( r 6.116 ) .
10 So I I I 've said to Margaret , he 's a , I think he must doing something with the extractor fan because he 's cut a hole in the er barge pole so , on the board so obviously
11 He must free himself from the control of any established church and its priests and instead subordinate them to the State .
12 He must introduce them into the plane of his own discourse , but in such a way that this plane is not destroyed .
13 First , however , he must prove himself in the hardest job of his life .
14 But suppose we think that everything that is said purports to be a statement of fact , and suppose we think that for someone to be justified in saying what he says he must say it on the basis of something he has observed .
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