Example sentences of "he [verb] [pron] of [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Although agreeing that this approach raises value issues ( his first question ) , he thinks it of limited use in generating a range of curriculum alternatives ( second question ) , that it ignores the effects of choosing particular courses of action ( third question ) , and does not facilitate an examination of teacher 's common sense beliefs and opinions ( fourth question ) .
2 He found plenty of thickish sticks and picked up far more than he needed .
3 Plus he has plenty of other work on the way : Bodies , Rest And Motion , an existential romantic comedy for the twentysomething generation in which he plays opposite Bridget Fonda ; and the low-budget Jumpin' At The Boneyard , in which he plays a Bronx street kid trying to straighten out his crackhead brother .
4 He has plenty of good form over three miles and less and the way he progressed last season suggests he could develop into a Gold Cup horse .
5 He advises lots of olive oil , pasta , rice , duck and fish .
6 On his second voyage , in the winter ( May–June 1819 ) , he saw nothing of New South Shetland .
7 This was certainly a strange case , but he had not known the Pitts and he saw plenty of messy deaths .
8 He was a different type of skater but he did plenty of modern lip stuff including backside smith stop to fakie , and much other to-fakie weirdness .
9 He reminded her of little Gabriel , of so many others during the war .
10 He reminds me of gay Peter .
11 It was out of season for rugby and so he had plenty of roving time and the nights were growing longer .
12 Lowell told her that he would finance the phone call , he had plenty of small change .
13 I think it was the old Gladding Masters match , he did n't win it ( Pete Palmer did ) , but he had plenty of big names behind him ( I think the editor might have been one of them ) and showed why he must have been greatly feared in his prime .
14 He said nothing of miraculous creation and instead proposed that the ‘ new ’ populations simply migrated in from areas not affected by the catastrophe .
15 He wanted someone of high calibre , with business and administrative skills , who was outside the traditional courtier mould yet compatible with the Old Guard already in situ .
16 He said he knows nothing of rural ministry . ’
17 And I fancy that erm a large part of his animus against latterday Oxford philosophy was that he suspected it of covert idealism , erm a preoccupation simply with the knowing mind , insufficient attention to the facts of the world as presented by science .
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