Example sentences of "he [adv] [vb -s] [prep] [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 so , so he , he makes quite a big point out of that , you know er that , and then he obviously talks about other things , the flour drum erm you know which basically vulgar performances of
2 In dealing with compositions , it 's like meeting a person ; the person has certain characteristics , maybe he is kind , perhaps there are certain possibilities within him — unexplored potential — but he only functions within certain confinements .
3 Crueller still is the fact that a loss to 16 fight challenger is likely to rob McKenzie of his last chance to make the big money he richly deserves after 10 years of sterling service .
4 That 's all he ever thinks about these days . ’
5 Despite suggestions that he should bathe every day , he still suffers from smelly feet and bad breath .
6 He still plays with wee men , you know he , he will have this strip of board
7 He also points to promising markets outside Europe , including far-flung Australia .
8 He also watches through lowered eyebrows as I keep the heads on my fish .
9 He also believes in effective communications at home .
10 ONE of Harold Gale 's attributes is that he perpetually thinks of new ideas .
11 The extract from the file on Tweed you sent with the courier made the point he often stays at top places because he thinks he 's less likely to be noticed . ’
12 And he says he enjoys walking ; he often goes for long walks by himself . ’
13 Always an out-spoke interviewee , he now taps into spiritual matters immediately you begin to speak to him .
14 He then worked at a Salmon Farm near Fort William before joining Douglas Reyburn , where he now concentrates on new developments and quality control .
15 He now lives in three homes in Kenya : they belong to people who think of themselves , he says , as his sons .
16 He frequently accompanies in public concerts .
17 In a new collection of his photographs — My Lithuania — from publishers Thames and Hudson ( £24.00 ) , he certainly admits to literary pretensions as a young man and his photographs can be seen as an attempt to capture the lives of fellow Lithuanians in the detail which only words can usually portray .
18 Yet he explicitly appeals to both concepts .
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