Example sentences of "what he [vb -s] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 To ask the Chancellor of the Exchequer what he estimates the public sector borrowing requirement will be for 1992-93 .
2 I tell you what he does a bloody lot for
3 The Secretary of State repeated several times that we need such a scale of weaponry to provide what he calls a credible deterrent .
4 Now he works from what he calls a glorified shed .
5 Moore says that those who try to identify good with some complex property are committing what he calls the naturalistic fallacy .
6 Pearse identifies the same process as the Kulak path when he shows how the incorporative drive draws out what he calls the progressive element among the peasantry ( Pearse 1975 ) .
7 Melossi ( 1985 ) discusses how social discourses change with the various stages of what he calls the political business cycle .
8 And in his book , er , The Age of the Crowd , Moscavisi refers to what he calls the black books of Dr Freud .
9 We conclude by noting that Young ( 1987 ) , in a paper which attacks the one-sided partiality of much criminological theory , is rightly critical of what he calls the adversarial positivism which characterises the debate over unemployment and crime .
10 This is the context of Foucault 's critique of what he calls the sovereign model of power , of the idea that power has a single source in a master , king , or class — and can thus easily be reversed .
11 Barthes 's commentary represents what he calls the step-by-step approach which affirms the text 's plurality by the attempt to ‘ star [ étoiler ] the text instead of assembling it ’ ( p. 13 ) , to fragment and disperse it , instead of unifying it .
12 Expressive behaviour , according to Tormey ( and not to be confused with the way Harré is using the term ) points in two directions simultaneously : towards some state of emotional arousal in the person ( say , anger or wonder or pleasure ) ; and towards what he calls an intentional object , something outside the person to which the state of arousal is prepositionally related .
13 Mr Stern has not flinched from talking to buyers , sellers , advisers , consultants , accountants , friends , farmers and agents in his determination to buy at what he considers a reasonable price .
14 As some of Mr. Gould 's descriptions appeared to me brief , I have enlarged them , but have always endeavoured to retain his specific character ; so that , by this means , I trust I shall not throw any obscurity on what he considers the essential character in each case ; but at the same time , I hope , that these additional remarks may render the work more complete .
15 But Cureton then groups clitic phrases into what he considers the intonational structure to be .
16 Whatever the right labels , the attitudinist agrees that no properly ethical expression can be adequately defined in purely naturalistic or even metaphysical terms but offers what he thinks a better explanation of this fact than the invocation of non-natural properties , namely that such definitions ignore valuational or emotive meaning .
17 LORD ATKIN : The ordinary blackmailer normally threatens to do what he has a perfect right to do-namely , communicate some compromising conduct to a person whose knowledge is likely to affect the person threatened .
18 Interrupted by what he terms a second wave of moral regeneration and repression in the nineteenth century , it resumes its onward march from the 1860s , to the present .
19 For the purpose of this paper he ignores what he terms the pre-influence stage .
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