Example sentences of "he [verb] [adv] [verb] to [noun] " in BNC.

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1 He goes on to refer to legislation in 1980 in West Germany and in 1982 in Italy whereby post-operative transsexuals are deemed to belong to their chosen sex and have the rights and duties of that sex .
2 He goes on to say to Maria that
3 Disappointed by her dull response , he moved away to talk to Muriella .
4 Algernon Peckham glanced at him , and there was a momentary pause before he moved on to speak to James Pegg .
5 He has finally come to terms with being a United player . ’
6 But he has already said to employees and investors that the option he finds most attractive is keeping IBM intact as the biggest , and hopefully mightiest , firm in its industry .
7 He has also complained to County Hall at Durham about county councillor Charles French who spoke against the postal vote at the meeting .
8 He has doubtless talked to Wasim Akram and knows how attractive the inducements can be .
9 The locals field one former Test player , Madan Lal , and although Maninder Singh — last seen being swept to oblivion by Gooch in the Bombay World Cup semi-final — was practising at the England net yesterday , he has yet to come to terms with an attack of the yips .
10 He has yet to come to terms with the fact that a popular front of the mind or body means a Labour leader in Number 10 .
11 His son , also Leonard , of Crud-y-Gwynt , Mynydd Isa , near Mold , used to work at BAe as an electrician , although he has now moved to Vauxhall .
12 He has now returned to Birmingham , where he is the newspaper 's Assistant Editor .
13 He has recently moved to Bohemians club ) in Dublin and is playing ok .
14 He has recently returned to Europe after a year 's exile teaching in New Hampshire , and is currently living in Italy .
15 On this basis he may by all means erect a system of imperatives logically interrelated with statements of objective fact , and elaborate it to any degree of complexity he pleases , but to confirm or correct it he has always to return to subjectivity , to his own spontaneity in the concrete situation .
16 He 'd just spoken to Detective Inspector Balfour in his hole on the Foulness road , but there was n't much news on that front .
17 He 'd earlier referred to discrepancies in gathering evidence which , while they had no bearing on this case , might affect future prosecutions
18 So I told him to take these tablets and says if he felt no better he 'd better get to doctors , well he did n't even move out of bed , apart from summat to eat
19 And er he 'd only got to sort of look at you and er that was it .
20 I 'll be like Geor Geo George 's mother one year and his mo and his mother was in her seventies he came in says to daddy ho gosh !
21 Both she and Graham agreed there was little else they could do that night and when he telephoned through to report to UNACO headquarters he was told a company Cessna would be waiting at six o'clock the following morning to fly them on to Geneva , the nearest airport to Lausanne .
22 But he was a tough boy and he determined not to go to pieces .
23 Firelight generally ate a bit of her haynet and by the time he settled down to go to sleep she lay down as well .
24 He went on to refer to Rhodes ' phrase of ‘ government in the hands of civilised men ’ .
25 Moss escaped with his life but the famous " Lucky No.7 " car of his was not seen in a Formula One Grand Prix again although he did later return to saloon car racing .
26 And , unlike Mrs Thatcher , he did not rush to conclusions .
27 In 1920 he was made nuncio to the German Republic , although he did not move to Berlin until 1925 .
28 Nevertheless , he did not go to university unwillingly .
29 He did not go to university but entered the Middle Temple in 1607 .
30 He did not go to Carolina .
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