Example sentences of "[modal v] [verb] him the " in BNC.

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1 She must must must give him the money , the ships , anything , and he must must must carry her flag and her favour beyond the end of the end of the earth , into exaltation and immortality , linking them for ever with bonds far harder to dissolve than those of any mortal love , the harsh and deifying ties of history .
2 First , the firm must not indicate that the customer would be a customer of a UK office and , if the customer is a private customer , must give him the prescribed disclosure warning him that all or most of the FSA protections will not apply .
3 The top chasers have a habit of being able to give weight and a beating to their more humble rivals and although Barnbrook Again appears to have been given a stiff task in conceding 8lb to Rusch de Farges , his two runs already this season should give him the advantage .
4 Do n't you think we should give him the benefit of the doubt ? ’
5 Now he was insisting that she should give him the dress she was wearing to pay off the debt .
6 Madam , I 'm gon na ask you to say in those circumstances that we should give him the maximum discharge .
7 He mentioned he often gets the coaching bug , I say Leeds should give him the opportunity to get more involved in that side now .
8 If you do , then maybe you should give him the chance he is asking for .
9 If you do , then maybe you should give him the chance he is asking for .
10 that should give him the
11 The Government are always making predictions , and in that sense the Chancellor may be described as the Mother Shipton — perhaps I should call him the Brother Shipton — of economics .
12 It occurred to me this was not an ideal arrangement ; I had a funny , cold feeling in the middle of dinner that perhaps we had been wrong to delay matters until this last moment , where there could be no immediate follow-up , when I must leave him the next day .
13 The official warns Butch he must tell him the type of ball , and so Butch has another go : ‘ Ta-Ta-Ta-Ta … ’ and he stamps his foot in frustration .
14 For once , she must tell him the truth , never mind that he had behaved so badly last night .
15 She was n't sure whether she should tell him the sordid details .
16 Regardless of your personal feelings towards the Chairman , you must afford him the utmost respect in addressing him and obeying his rulings .
17 The reason for this , I later discovered , is that at yours there is likely to be a selection of friends and relations , one of whom in the course of discussion is bound to say , ‘ Come on , let's give him the best ! ’ and although he or she is very seldom the one who is paying for it , no one likes to appear mean at such a time — an attitude , I might add , of which the undertaker thoroughly approves !
18 The state of the microscopist 's art is now such that the choice of instrument to use depends largely on what he wants to see , and in some applications the acoustic microscope may give him the sharpest pictures ever .
19 If the potential plaintiff has other dealings with the potential defendant , these may give him the opportunity to exercise rights of set-off .
20 Occasionally I might buy him the big third Mac , the third Big Mac , just to prove to him he ca n't eat it , and this establishes in the superego a , that the , the superego to some extent speaks for reality and , and the reality sense is part of the , is part of the standards which are built into , which are built into the superego , and to , and therefore to a large extent the superego opposes the pleasure principle that operates in the id .
21 Maybe we 'll come across a friendly native with a forked stick going in the right direction and I 'll give him the big-screen smile and hand it over .
22 I 'll give him the two .
23 I 'm not being nasty I 'll give him the money , but
24 Oh yeah , I 'll give him the money now .
25 I 'll give him the phone number if he wants .
26 Clough went into the match against Everton wondering whether another setback might bring him the sack on the day he joined the Nottinghamshire miners on a protest march .
27 ‘ We 'll show him the sights , ’ McGowan said , and he leaned back and laughed , and the city lights on his mirror shades looked like gold zips that had come undone .
28 It might benefit him the more if the money were to be withheld until he is older .
29 We 'll send him the money through the — ’
30 He took care of the nation 's finances , Aunt Harriet had said , you might call him the Keeper of the Purse .
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