Example sentences of "he [vb past] [pron] [adv] [adv] [subord] " in BNC.
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1 | At last , with greasy fingers , she managed to guide him to her saturated hole , and he penetrated her as easily as her own fingers did when she masturbated . |
2 | It was but er the market was so low that he decided not to well I do n't think he could get a buyer actually , it 's just stood there so he he he let it out rather than have it stood there with the option for us to buy it but I say now the prices are lower he 's not keen on selling it at that price . |
3 | He used it sometimes rather than go into the factory at Newbury . |
4 | He told us on more than one occasion that he could not himself contemplate coming down from the House of Lords and denuding it of himself as well as its leader . |
5 | He lashed it again violently until the animal stirred into an indolent amble . |
6 | He hated it especially now as he dragged it out of its corner in the garage , squeezed it between his Vauxhall Viva estate car and the twins ' tricycles , and rolled it on to the uneven surface in front of the garage doors . |
7 | He shook him more vigorously than before , this time by his cloak , and said boldly , " I have every right to one " ; adding , " Kiss me . " |
8 | He released her as suddenly as he had come to her support and she grasped quickly and covertly at the back of another chair , not wanting him to know that her numbed leg was tingling painfully now . |
9 | In last week 's Tribune , Sawyer suggested that ballots of affiliated members in leadership contests might be made compulsory and that block votes could be split , although he expressed himself more cautiously than Gould intends to . |
10 | There was nothing to be gained by worrying further , so he settled himself as comfortably as possible against the trunk of the tree . |
11 | Personal sins , he warned him as early as 796 , could lose him his kingdom , for of his predecessors who had lost life and kingdom God condemned the perjury of some , the adultery of others , the avarice and fraud of others , and the unjust deeds of the rest . |
12 | This time it was his eyes that were narrowed as he watched her as closely as any cat after a mouse . |
13 | If he hit it as straight as Ben Hogan , he would never get beaten . " |
14 | It was vaguely insulting to know that he treated her as casually as he would have treated any stranger with whom he found himself forced to share a house . |
15 | One day I asked him if he knew Fanny 's young man , and he said he knew him as well as he knew himself ! ’ |
16 | She had not quite the disdain of him that she put into what she said ; and perhaps he knew it as well as she did . |
17 | He brought me as far as your gate , which was decent of him — and then bolted as if the bears were after him . |
18 | As they neared fulfilment , he rolled them slowly sideways until his body was covering hers . |
19 | Sandy Pearlman , producer of ‘ Give ‘ Em Enough Rope ’ , so disliked Joe Strummer 's voice that he mixed it more quietly than the drums throughout the album . |
20 | I might have guessed , ’ and then he uttered a string of oaths , so oddly at variance with his usual smooth and civilised manner and appearance that Sally-Anne shivered and tried again to pull away from him , but he held her more tightly than ever . |
21 | He held it up triumphantly as though it were a trophy then knelt beside the nearest keg and traced his finger around the seal of the small bung . |
22 | He ran his hand the length of her spine , making her aware that he wanted her as badly as she wanted him , and for a wild moment she could see no reason why they should n't make love . |
23 | He pushed me as far as the trees and I seized a trailing branch . |
24 | She instructed him to wash her , and was surprised when he soaped her as gently as if she was a baby . |
25 | He backed it not just because he was convinced by Rueff and his advisers that it would reduce inflation and revitalize the economy through the stimulus of competition , but because he was attracted by its theatrical elements — the symbolism of a new franc to mark a new political order , the grand gesture of carrying out commitments to Europe that the Fourth Republic had given up hopes of honouring , the rhetoric of a coherent plan of renovation as opposed to a collection of policies . |