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

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ‘ He 's good fun , and he plays a decent game of tennis .
2 He plays a different type of game to Steve Davis .
3 The idea which has swallowed Kirillov is suicide , not suicide for the common cause of the quintet as Dostoevsky first proposed , but to achieve a metaphysical and religious purpose ; and thus he plays a big part in the transformation of a neat political generation-gap story into a larger , more complicated object .
4 He plays a short sample down the phone , an almost unintelligible blur May , a non-stop talker and tireless ambassador for techno , rolls his eyes in a resigned manner ’ I get every kid in the city ringing me up and I feel bad because I do n't have time to talk to them . ’
5 He turns a reproachful face on her for admitting what kind of a girl she is .
6 He appreciates a good attempt at an answer even if the final result is not " correct " .
7 He displays a wide range of diplomatic skills such as always speaking the other person 's language , being acutely sensitive to customer needs and creatively expressing genuine appreciation for a job well done .
8 As an alternative , he offers a reasoned defence of the demands of community understood in more traditional terms .
9 He offers a concise history of recent work , indicates clearly what issues remain unresolved and suggests the directions of future research .
10 But he offers a brilliant rendering of Do n't Put Your Daughter On The Stage , Mrs Worthington rising to heights of boiling , brick-red rage on ‘ She 's a vile girl and uglier than mortal sin . ’
11 In describing laboratory methods he offers a clear account of the underlying scientific principles and practical techniques , followed by relevant material from case histories and objective assessment of advantages , limitations and future possibilities .
12 In his buoyant narrative style , his particularly exact , observant eye for detail , his confident concentration on a particular event coloured by emotion but not by an intensity of analysis , he offers a significant contrast to Conrad 's dense , probing accounts of similar events .
13 He laughs a low laugh of relief .
14 Mageeba makes no concessions to the white political world yet he understands a great deal about it .
15 He represents a great noble of the Empire , perhaps even the Emperor himself .
16 In terms of man 's cultural development he represents a royal epiphany of the primal father , an authentic reincarnation of primal despotism .
17 However , at a different level — the level at which this long-term strategy has to be harnessed to the interests , aspirations and self-images of an electorate — he represents a significant adaptation of the post-Thatcher world .
18 But he represents a different style of monarchy , a different style of man from perhaps Prince Andrew , who might have made a much more typical Windsor king .
19 Do you mean he represents a Lebanese faction like Islamic Jihad or that he is of the Hezbollah , the Party of God ? ’
20 So it 's equally unsurprising that he receives a steady stream of unsolicited portfolios from eager aspirants searching for their break .
21 The give-us-our trough back campaign is threatening to organise a protest march every week but Councillor Smith says he wo n't even discuss moving the trough until he receives a full apology from his accusers .
22 This September he launches a new scent for men called — what else — Photo .
23 Steiner 's association of homosexuality with narcissism , solipsism , and the refusal of referentiality obviously suggests reservations about both modernism ( as he conceives it ) and the efficacy of the homosexual influence upon it , and it comes as no surprise that in his most recent book he launches a strong attack on the former .
24 He grins briefly , fiddling with his food , before he launches a verbal attack on Oxford 's much-maligned university students .
25 He launches a detailed attack on the many aspects of scholastic teaching which had their basis in the logical works of Aristotle 's Organon .
26 He produces a small card from his waistcoat pocket and presents it .
27 He looks a bad colour to me . "
28 He mops his brow as he demolishes a double helping of pie , salty mash and pale green gravy .
29 He joins a general strike by those who have been dispossessed on Urras and tells them : ‘ ( on Anarres ) we have nothing but our freedom .
30 ‘ by a person duly licensed to drive it ’ The problem of hearsay evidence can occur where a passenger in a motor vehicle has to be asked whether or not he holds a current licence for the class of vehicle .
  Next page