Example sentences of "he [vb past] i [verb] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 I wanted to go out last week , but he said , ‘ No way , you 're not going out there ’ , and he made me stay in the whole week .
2 Then he made me look at the windows .
3 He asked me to sort through the files and see if I could come up with something to make life easier . ’
4 He asked me to bring over the wedding invitation …
5 When I caught up with Jean-Claude , he told me to return to the cottage alone .
6 And there , the tailor , he 'd been trained in the war , and he he only had one la leg , and he seemed very nice , but er he told me to start on the Monday and then I got a letter .
7 He told me to look across the moor to a place which was a bright green colour .
8 He told me to write with the head , and not with the heart .
9 He told me to stay in the house — not to go out . ’
10 He advised me to go to the Academy and work with Professor Dachauer .
11 Frequently he would stop on his walk around the teams on a Sunday , and at least on one occasion he advised me to break from the scrum more often ( in those days airmen scrum-halfs played to orders ) .
12 When we got to the market , for the first time he allowed me to bargain with the dealers .
13 The teachers were in on my research from the beginning , erm I originally gained the co-operation of the headmaster — he allowed me to come into the school — and then I found the teachers enormously co-operative , in fact , far more cooperative than I had a really had a right to expect .
14 As an active Trotskyite he encouraged me to speak of the prejudice and abuse I 'd faced being the son of an Indian .
15 He taught me to aim for the knees since any weapon firing on automatic would climb high and right , and thus the fall of shot could be evenly distributed across the stomach and torso , ending in the head .
16 He watched me deal with the piglets and said he would call me when he needed a vet . ’
17 The garage attendant , who almost called in a SWAT team when he saw me arrive that morning , had a few more palpitations when he watched me climb in the back seat and start peeling off my biker 's gear .
18 He saw me looking at the picture and said , ‘ Kolwezi , Southern Zaire , 1978 . ’
19 In fact he had me arriving at the scene in a police car with two tones , at , at , at that time we did n't have police cars with two tones , just siren , so they obviously put some sound on it .
20 So he said erm I said to the woman I went to the court this morning so he said when you explain to me he said I 've got money in my pockets cos I borrowed it from dad tha he said I owed sixty two pound so he said I said to the woman in the court how can I pay this the sixty two pounds when you 've frozen my account ?
21 He said I waved at the poor man like a loony .
22 Well there was er the one who had the most important influence in my school life was Albert Edward , do you remember the printers , he was a teacher and he used to teach standard four , that was your last standard in the junior , and he had a big influence on , on me because er he wanted me to go into the printing trade as an apprentice , but I , me leaving school at thirteen and going into full-time work straight away I could n't do , do that but oh there was er , , he was an officer during the war he was in the and there was oh our , our school teacher , we used to call , we used to call him his name was actually Arthur I think , but he was always , he was a little bit addicted to the lit little whisky bottle , he used to keep a little bottle in his desk and he 'd be having a nip of whisky , but he was what was approximated as a sports master now , he used to look after the football team , we used to call him , I suppose his name was Arthur but his name was .
23 He wanted me to go round the block and park the car about fifty metres short of the hotel .
24 He wanted me to look at the provision by the business of work experience for secondary school students during the compulsory stage of their education .
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