Example sentences of "put him [prep] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 erm the managerial action which is available for you , t to take him out of there and put him into a different post , because he 's not capable of doing .
2 Only the last of these put him in a bad light , but it is enough .
3 Put him in the wet treatment-room . ’
4 Okay , then you would all agree , you 've got to put him through the old P C course .
5 Finally , after a long desperate battle with her conscience , she agreed , after he had had a small heart attack , to put him into a local hospital .
6 And believe it or not we 've got to put him on a high chair to enable him to manage his instrument . ’
7 This appears to put him on the right side of the new rulers , even if Steaua were answerable to one of Ceausescu 's brothers .
8 You would n't mind if he married your daughter , but you would n't want to put him on the front page .
9 Again , Brian Harley hit a less-than-perfect drive , but his two-iron across the angle of the dogleg put him on the front edge of the green .
10 What Hornung had done was to take his brother-in-law 's famous detective , Sherlock Holmes , and put him on the wrong side of the law ; a friendly dedication acknowledged the debt .
11 And yesterday Darlington bus inspector Malcolm Humble told how a Sure Style salesman put him through a five-hour ordeal before threatening to send him a bill for his time .
12 Lowe put him through an intensive course of twice-a-week sprint training and night hill-running .
13 But it was with the coming of sound , in 1929 , that Colman 's Hollywood career really came into its own : the producer Sam Goldwyn was the first to realize the magic of that infinitely poetic , English voice , and put him under a long-term contract which was to last virtually the whole of the rest of his life .
14 He persuaded Reid 's wife , actress Dorothy Davenport , to sign Wally 's commitment papers which put him into a private sanatorium .
15 Election defeats at the hands of Shaftesbury , now lord chancellor , in 1673 ‘ put him into a great rage ’ and brought him to the fore in parliamentary debates .
16 In fact , she thought , tonsure his greying hair and put him into a plain robe and he would have passed for a tubby , somewhat benign-looking monk .
17 Keep the old man in there , get him out in good time to defrost , maybe even put him in a hot bath to remove any traces of his preservation .
18 Where , I gather , Dhani put him in a Buddhist monastery and nursed him back to health — he 'd known Dhani at school and Cambridge .
19 The court had taken Harvey away from his father and put him in the foster home ‘ until such time as the father can control his drinking and make a safe home for the boy . ’
20 If reserved for his personal use , it might put him at a certain advantage over his employer .
21 Leithers will give the Prime Minister a warm welcome , but they will put him in the hot seat because of mass unemployment , homelessness and general misery , which have been experienced not just in my constituency , but throughout Britain .
22 Get a piece of Brie and some Vignottes , that 'll put him in the forgiving mood . ’
23 Injuries permitting , he should finish this season approaching 600 career games — with a tally of goals putting him among the 300-plus elite .
24 But do n't worry : I 've put him on a separate floor . ’
25 They 've put him on the top floor like the other ones we 've had . ’
26 Maud had put him into a small hotel near the street where he was born , telling him to absorb the atmosphere .
27 Hugh 's prompting , perhaps intentionally , had put him into a difficult position .
28 Turnour has changed from being relaxed and comfortable with what he was about to do to feeling uneasy in a strange environment which has now put him in a bad mood .
29 He had two other wins that year , at Zandvoort and Monza , but his car let him down on other occasions when his excellent driving had put him in a race-winning situation .
30 The angry look on the judge 's sallow face showed that either his attendance in court that morning or Cranston 's arrival had put him in an ill humour .
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