Example sentences of "he be [adv] [verb] [pron] [det] " in BNC.

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1 The researcher who cautiously confines his conclusions to those strictly justified by the data may be safe from criticism , but he is not making his own full potential contribution .
2 If a person has , say , five jobs to do as part of his professional responsibility , and is beginning to feel inadequate because he is n't doing them all perfectly … take on ten more .
3 And if he does and then I see him and that he is n't doing it any more , at least I 've got job satisfaction in that he has n't .
4 He 's probably getting them all in and then sending out all the replies , just speak into that .
5 he 's not caused us any hassle at all , er he 's been very helpful
6 He 's not bringing me any supper .
7 ‘ Men are aggressive'– ‘ He 's not giving you enough space ’ , ‘ The problem is money ’ , ‘ I know exactly how you feel ’ , ‘ It 'll never happen . ’
8 this Wednesday afternoon linking the East Midlands , and it promises to be something of a rather special afternoon this Afternoon Special because we have a very special guest , the legendary Adam Faith who 's appearing in Alfie , not until next March at Nottingham 's Theatre Royal , but he 's here to tell us all about the play and himself .
9 But he 's only buying his own
10 He 's actually sacked his own foreman , the main contractor cos the main , the foreman turned up on site and this I think is one of the lessons to be learnt , is that foreman turned up on site and saw what was happening
11 But then tomorrow he 's actually doing his own work .
12 Can I first of all congratulate my colleague Graham , Graham on his measured speech , he 's certainly given us many things to , to think about and things that should be investigated .
13 He 's always telling me all the best people are born in April .
14 He was already taking his own advice .
15 Eliot wrote back and discussed the matter ; he was already formulating his own ideas on the general subject — he gave a paper on " The Christian Concept of Education " at a conference in Malvern in January 1941 — but , since they were markedly different from those of Pound , it is probable that he was only humouring him .
16 He said to me on the phone he did n't know a great deal cos he was just getting it all together .
17 She looked at George , but he was just pouring himself another glass of port .
18 The manors were the natural complement to Gloucester 's lordship of Sheriff Hutton and he was later to farm them both from the crown .
19 The manors were the natural complement to Gloucester 's lordship of Sheriff Hutton and he was later to farm them both from the crown .
20 The problem for Sombro was that at the mere age of three , he was getting old before his time because of his rampant ways and , by the look of the scars on his face , ears and neck , he was n't finding it any easier to hold his own with the competition .
21 He was also suiting his own book .
22 And after Jim 's death , to be destructive became an attitude , as opposed to what Jim did — playing out a mythic drama where he was really wrestling his own death .
23 Indeed , as C. S. L. Davies has suggested , the arrogance with which he treated his fellow-councillors in the two years before his fall in October 1549 may owe a lot to his outstanding success at Pinkie , when he may have believed that he was about to achieve what some of the greatest of English kings had failed to do .
24 Brando said , ‘ Why , you sonofabitch , ’ and I said , ‘ Well , up yours too , pal , ’ and then he was suddenly giving me all of it , and I could do no wrong .
25 In a way he was only echoing her own thoughts but to hear them spoken aloud and by this unsympathetic stranger was oddly disturbing .
26 He was now showing his own responsiveness to Dave and Dave 's response in return , which made Mr E more hopeful about him .
27 Having read again a book he had admired when studying at Edinburgh , a book much concerned with precisely such comparisons and contrasts — his grandfather Brasmus Darwin 's Zoönomia ( 1794–6 ) — he was soon taking its title for the opening heading of his Notebook B , where he was now to pursue his own inquiry into ‘ the laws of life ’ .
28 He was still wearing his own clothes , too .
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