Example sentences of "he [verb] with the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 Tonight she had said nothing , so Frankie almost believed himself safe , yet he lived with the constant fear that one night she would make a horrible mistake and he would walk to his death in the inky shadows upstairs .
2 In July 1947 he agreed with the Jewish Agency to support partition and the establishment of a Jewish state in return for Jewish financial help for Transjordan .
3 ‘ I could , ’ he agreed with the forbidding smile still on his face .
4 The girl had been missing for what — a week ? — and off-hand he agreed with the local man 's judgement that she had been here for most of it .
5 In a remarkably frank interview , Coppell confronted the troubles he faces after eight years at Selhurst Park , and said he agrees with the inevitable consequence should he be unable to pass the biggest test of his career .
6 He had enjoyed a distinguished military career : he fought with the Black Prince at Crécy when he was only sixteen , and served in Brittany between 1360 and 1367 .
7 ‘ Do n't mess around with me ! ’ he interrupted with the savage snarl of an angry lion , making Meredith take a step back in astonishment .
8 He moved with the mechanical lope of hydraulic-assisted legs .
9 and he concludes with the familiar warning :
10 A managerial action could be that he transfers with the outside party services .
11 There is now only the one pool , which he designed with the specific purpose of encouraging Koi-keepers with limited space .
12 He mounted the horse he had led for the last hour or so and walked it cautiously down into Buttermere which he entered with the utter conviction that he had been there before .
13 Mozart wrote music so he could buy himself velvet trousers and Shakespeare got up to write a play every day because he needed to live like the rest of us , ’ he added with the disarming arrogance that had established him as one-third of pop 's most hated team .
14 He painted with the meticulous craft of the Elizabethan limner in a style derived from the elaborate concoctions of mannerist court portraiture ; a style soon to be swept away by the tide of the baroque brought to England from Flanders by Rubens and Sir Anthony Van Dyck [ q.v . ] .
15 He conferred with the Anglican Bishop ( who had been in the same Japanese POW camp as he ) ; and spent hours with a crowd of young Rhodesians , black and white , who are now in action with us .
16 In his book Mind Over Golf ( BBC Books , £8.99 ) , he deals with the mental side of the game and features the left and right brains , which is news to those limping along with one .
17 In subsequent sections , he deals with the Solar System , the stars , stellar revolution .
18 Much of his later work , achieved under the shadow of inexorably crippling and ultimately fatal illness , which he faced with the utmost fortitude , was latterly facilitated by the research fellowship conferred on him by All Souls in 1954 .
19 ‘ Novantaquattro ’ Ludovico groaned , as he wrestled with the huge lock .
20 He smiles with the familiar grin I know so well , but this time I see those eyes of loneliness , as if there 's something no-one could understand , hidden by his visage of cheerfulness .
21 He dispensed with the patriarchal rhetoric that de Gaulle had used to pamper a nation stuck in the miasma of post-occupation guilt .
22 Primal Scream 's petty pilfering of dance rhythms turned into wholesale hijacking when they gave club deejay Andy Weatherall a cast-off riff to play with and he returned with the seductive bump and grind of ‘ Loaded ’ .
23 He served with the Parliamentary army as a chaplain on two occasions , although he also disapproved of putting the king to death .
24 During the war he served with the Royal Navy Combined Operations in the Far East before working as an overseas executive for Fison 's .
25 Throughout the war , he served with the Royal Army Medical Corps and his appointments included Deputy Director of Pathology in the Central Mediterranean Force and later DDP in South-East Asia .
26 He stuck with the difficult business of painting , and with a difficult set of non-rules to follow .
27 He worked with the bovine strain , but confirmed his positive findings with virulent human organisms .
28 During the war of 1914–18 he worked with the Royal Army Medical Corps as a psychiatrist in hospitals , including Craiglockhart , for shell-shocked soldiers .
29 Macijauskas himself is from the second city and former capital , Kaunas which is where he worked with the local branch of the society , won some competitions and became a newspaper reporter .
30 He started with the top dealer who specialized in Fabergé and Russian works of art .
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