Example sentences of "[adv] [coord] [verb] him " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Sometimes our pictures are so inaccurate that we see a person wrongly or miss him altogether . |
2 | Christina decided he looked happy enough and left him to enjoy himself . |
3 | Find out what the person in doubt is believing wrongly and help him to follow the logic of these presuppositions to their necessary conclusion . |
4 | The scriptwriter — a trim , balding man in his fifties with a moustache — squeezed Dexter 's hand a little too warmly and gave him a serious smile of appraisal . |
5 | Crilly hugs my brother back warmly and introduces him to the languid one . |
6 | Combining the experience of age and the energy of youth might help all of us to understand God better and recognise him in our lives today . |
7 | It was uncomfortable enough , knowing she would have to face him , but it was worse not to know when , to wonder if she would turn around suddenly and find him watching her with those cold , cold eyes … |
8 | Theda stopped still suddenly and faced him . |
9 | He left his village and went to live in a deserted tomb ; an obliging friend locked him inside and brought him bread from time to time . |
10 | She drew him inside and led him towards the candle-light . |
11 | Some gave him their answer at the door , others invited him inside and sat him down to ask his question . |
12 | Then awaken him gently and present him with the bill . |
13 | The Pharaoh is met by the lissom naked figure of Nut who takes his wrist gently and leads him forward to his tomb . |
14 | Robyn snorted impatiently and threw him a look of disgust . |
15 | My brothers 'd be watching his every move , just hoping he 'd put a foot wrong so they could jump in and scrag him . |
16 | Er would you not say that this has shifted the onus of responsibility very much on to the financial institutions , the banks and others who had dealings with Mr Maxwell , and is n't the judge in effect saying in your interpretation er of that , that these institutions er really have got to show they were whiter than white in their dealings and actually went in and investigated him thoroughly ? |
17 | And yet there was no school of thought which cultivated and refined that enthusiasm , no influential and witty group of young film makers who could draw him in and use him as C. A. Lejeune perceptively realised he could be used . |
18 | March in and tell him , straight to his face ! |
19 | But it was I mean you have to admit erm and I 'm I 'll bring Mr Power in and let him speak for himself , but you have to admit that it from what we 've just heard , it started in nineteen seventy four , it 's been going on a long time . |
20 | Robert arrived then and my mother let him in and offered him a drink . |
21 | Then the door of the Earl 's hall slowly yielded , and his father carried him in and laid him on the same bales . |
22 | She was infuriated by his arrogant assumption that he could simply demand answers , infuriated still more by her own desire to simply cave in and tell him the truth . |
23 | can go and , alright you can go in and tell him right |
24 | Owner Louie Lalonde will tell you how Bill broke his own rule by sitting with his back to the door the night Jack ‘ Broken Nose ‘ McCall crept in and shot him . |
25 | And we can go in and rescue him ! |
26 | Saw him at a sale being knocked down to a known horsemeat dealer and stepped in and outbid him at the last moment . |
27 | I 've had to go back up in to him , yeah , but I do n't know what happened last night , I do n't know whether he was not quite tired enough , erm , he must of got up as soon as I put him down and started sort of moaning then I went into the girls and I sorted them out he started screaming he did , so I had to go to him in and lay him down and making him lay down |
28 | She went in and kissed him all over . |
29 | In real-time only seconds had passed , not much more time than it would have taken to see if he was in and ask him for a few minutes of his time . |
30 | Being grafted onto a teenaged farrier 's somewhat wayward lifestyle was doing Henry no good , and he was destined to be ‘ lost ’ in the bush on a trip to Tamworth ( further north ) until Robert stepped in and adopted him . |