Example sentences of "he [vb mod] [adv] [verb] [adv prt] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Apart from dealing with the matter of the will if one was made , it may be agreed , if your parent wishes , that he should also take on the responsibility for contacting various persons and organisations : the bank , to arrange for money to be available to her pending the settlement of her husband 's affairs ; her husband 's employer and Trade Union branch secretary , or the secretary of any professional association to which he belonged ; his insurance company ; the Department of Health and Social Security , to obtain forms for claiming the death grant and the widow 's pension ; the Inland Revenue , if her husband was still paying income tax ; the Building Society , the mortgagor ( or landlord if she and her husband lived in rented property ) and any other person or organisation concerned .
2 Coleman knew them already — they had been to see him at the University of Alabama while planning the trip — and so it was natural enough that he should now take on the chore of shepherding them around the island during their stay .
3 If he had any energy left over he might well indulge in a bit more naughty meddling .
4 He would see it through , he would find the Way Out , And he might not even stop at simply escaping ; he might just smash up the whole foul contraption of their testing and imprisonment apparatus — this " life " — while he was about It .
5 He could even pick out the dots of furze bushes and stunted yew trees on the steep slopes .
6 The cubicle was thick with fragranced fog but he could just make out a dark hunched shape on the floor near the door .
7 As he ran through the list , he could just make out the wording of the certificate over the mantelpiece : ‘ Ancient Guild of Foresters ’ .
8 Looking towards the middle of the room he could just make out the hulk of the engine , even more dense than the surrounding dark .
9 If he squinted his eyes , he could just make out the greyness of the roof between the trees and here and there the stony finger of a chimney-stack .
10 Through the middle kitchen window he could just make out the open gate , the wooden ramp covering the steps and the first huge saddle-back sow ambling down into the yard .
11 The dirty chipped name plate was difficult to read but he could just make out the word Nettles on it .
12 He could just make out the chicken .
13 He could just make out the name in spite of the peeling paint .
14 As he gazed out , down the enormous length of the ship , he could just make out the dark outline against the lighter sea , and the rectangular shapes of the deck-covered containers .
15 He could just make out the sand dunes now , a blond strip on the far side of the lake , a good ten miles away .
16 He could just make out the great empty arch of the east window and beyond it the shimmer of the North Sea while above , seeming to move through and over it like a censer , swung the smudged yellow disc of the moon .
17 He could just make out the two rows of cottages and the fields beyond them .
18 Straining his eyes , he could just make out the two boxes which were stacked in the far corner of the room and a picture frame which was propped up against them .
19 Between the ranks of bared heads ( one or another of which would occasionally turn to take a quick glance of inspection at his own face ) he could just make out the graceful figure of Mrs Wright herself , kneeling on a hassock in front of the table .
20 He could just make out the railway embankment from here , but not the station or the building that used to be the Turk 's Head .
21 A large spider 's web occupied one corner of the room near the ceiling and he could just make out the spider lurking there , quite motionless ; emulating Mr Micawber , waiting for something to turn up .
22 He could just make out the bottom of the iron saucepan in which the mussels were still boiling for his guests .
23 It even had a name , he could just make out the tiny print .
24 He could just make out the greens , the fairways and the dunes through which the three dozen surviving professionals would toil tomorrow in search of their own Golden Fleece .
25 He could just make out the outline of the figure in front of him , sweeping its heavy cape to one side , then something smashed into the side of his head .
26 Down below , lost in the mist , he could just make out the holm-oaks and cypresses surrounding the Miletti property , a lugubrious baroque monstrosity built on a shoulder of land jutting out from the steep hillside .
27 and he would be only able to pick out a lot of the basic words , he could probably pick out the beginning of appreciation
28 In the darkness , he could barely make out the wooden boards that had been nailed into place over the shattered window vents at street level , but even down here they could hear the hissing of rain on the pavements outside and the grumbling of thunder in the sky .
29 Marx fancied that he could simply take over the Hegelian analysis and , in Engels ' famous phrase , ‘ stand Hegel the right way up ’ with no reference to the fact that Hegel 's whole analysis is rooted in an effort to resolve quite specific problems which he inherited in the theory of knowledge .
30 As Martin whispered his reply he raised his head slightly above the hedge and peered into the field , where now he could distinctly make out the hen crees and the dark blobs of the sheep .
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