Example sentences of "he [vb mod] [verb] [pers pn] in the " in BNC.

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1 I mean s Kingsley Black has stood it in here to the second post now if he does n't feel he can get enough on it to go for goal he should keep it in the danger area just turn it back across the face of the goal and let one of the other lads have a go at it , Collimore or Rozario .
2 Cos I can pick out his stuff or say I do n't like the look of that one and he 'll , he 'll chuck it in the back .
3 Sir John said placidly : ‘ If that is the case — that he knows something we do n't — I have little doubt that he 'll tell us in the fullness of time . ’
4 He says he 'll hang it in the toilet .
5 Instead of leaving Deanein the reserves as he did with rocky he 'll keep him in the firsts and he 'll come good .
6 ‘ Ca n't stay there , see , he 'll kill me in the end . ’
7 ‘ If you say he 's disabled , he 'll punch you in the eye , ’ says Michael .
8 He just asked if he could hide it in the museum .
9 They now told him , in no uncertain terms , that if he had something important to communicate , he could do it in the plant car park during the lunch break , or after working hours .
10 He could feel it in the bite of the breeze , the faintly golden light of the afternoon .
11 ‘ That was when I knew he could make it in the bigtime , ’ he says .
12 If he sets his mind to it he could make it in the cross-channel game , ’ says Scottish goal scoring ace Derek Cook , who himself will pose a considerable threat to Ards .
13 The book had found a publisher ; he could hope to write others ; he could support her in the manner expected .
14 It was n't as if he could see her in the flimsy satin nightdress , was it ?
15 There was a difference of course ; he could see it in the eyes .
16 He could see it in the man 's eyes and the manner in which his gaze lingered on Nona .
17 He could hear them in the rooms above .
18 Mind you I heard he could hear it in the background so he must have got a few kids
19 the only battleship I know about is the girl friend go away for about three months at a time and you 'd say of where 's Norman , oh he 's er working and then we all knew he 's working for a he 'd put them in the computer systems right the way throughout the ships
20 Her reaction was as though he 'd hit her in the face , then she recovered , left the room and walked into the kitchen at the end of the hall .
21 Well I used to the grindstone was in the cart shed , you see , and er I used to turn the handle whilst he ground his knives down and then he 'd take them in the slaughterhouse , after he got them ground , and put them on this stone to get them smooth , to get a fine edge on the knife .
22 And then little did he know when he used to leave them in the house , in the back yard , that we 'd been pinching some of them .
23 He used to shut you in the next room and give you a pile of books and you 'd have to take notes from about seven or eight different books .
24 His two brothers both died with smallpox cos one was , they all three went to Wolverhampton Grammar School and they were a Wednesbury family and they died with the smallpox but I thought they were putting the youngest which was my grandfather for the best trai one was going in for law and the other was going in for medicine , and the youngest was go which was the same as engineering is today I suppose , and he went into the gun trade , and I can remember him , he was a grand old chap and er he used to come and bring the springs that he 'd made and to temper them he used to throw them in the kitchen fire , and they 'd die out and get them all out of the ashes in the morning , and he used to take his week 's work in his waistcoat pockets and his day out was to get on the tram at the Brown Lion , and go straight through Wednesbury and right through West Bromwich up to the Constitutional in Birmingham to Greeners or Wembley and Scotts and he 'd got these gun locks as he 'd made during the week in his waistcoat pockets .
25 and er he used to , he had a contract with some big potato firm and he used to buy all the , the fertilizer bags in the locality and he used to bring them there to the end of the road and he used to wash them in the burn .
26 He would instruct me in the history of the world while the people of the world walked by , ignoring the salvation we offered them , and the icy wind blew around our ankles .
27 He would instruct them in the first instance to threaten to seize the man 's belongings to the value of the money owed .
28 He would meet her in the bar around six o'clock .
29 She might feel compelled to attack him physically at any moment and he was alarming enough to convince her that he would lift her in the air , shake her like a rag doll and toss her over a crag .
30 That really turned my stomach , even if , I mean I remember when I was carrying , when I was carrying the twins , and he used to go out huge things you know , and so much so that if he came home in the night , right , and I was already in bed asleep , I would be able to er , he would wake me in the bedroom cos I could smell smoke on him , but he did n't smoke , but where he 'd been the pub or a night club , I smelt
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