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

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1 Now his plea involves him in sharing their sentence with them .
2 A branch whipped him in the face .
3 I wish that Deane was scoring 3 a match — but I have nt had the opportunity to see him in action recently .
4 Clarkson 's narrative revealed his own perseverance and commitment until exhaustion and financial difficulty overtook him in 1794 and Hoare fastened upon Clarkson 's continuing ‘ zeal ’ .
5 that experience changed him in every way .
6 When Thomas tried to grab the child away , the lash caught him in the eye .
7 The Office tells us that he arranged for his sister to meet him in a nearby wood and to bring with her two of her over-dresses , one white and one grey , and his father 's rainhood .
8 Hooks of meat , barrows of vegetables , trays of pies , urns of tea passed him in every direction .
9 A journalist attacked him in 1791 for the ‘ permanent predominant prejudice , that the music is everything , and the words , nothing ’ at the Opéra : ‘ one is made aware of just one author , the author of the music . ’
10 The Mayor rebuked him in warm terms , whereupon the elegant creature said , hotly : ‘ Who are you to talk to me like that ? ’
11 — Like Mrs Plews , Mr Jim Tomlinson , of Richmond , found the study helped him in his work as a teacher at Risedale School , Hipswell , Catterick Garrison .
12 His father was a tailor and for some years the young Steen helped him in his business .
13 The second lorry ran into the car 's side sandwiching him in the wreckage .
14 The handlebar caught him in the groin .
15 In Denmark the same year Prime Minister Schluter went to the polls after a social democrat coalition defeated him in Parliament and ruled that NATO ships coming to Denmark must be nuclear weapon free .
16 Davide had turned up a coin , one afternoon , when he was mooning around ; it was a common enough type , the professor told him in the museum at Riba , where he took it for an opinion .
17 The US President received him in 1978 and so did the Queen — but the purges went on .
18 They had to walk right past the tramp to enter the church and they made absolutely no attempt to help him in any way .
19 Having tried to arrange repatriation and found it hopeless , he was resigned to whatever future faced him in Germany .
20 In the Hexham vacancy of 1866 the diocesan chapter included him in its terna , and in the same year Henry Manning , archbishop of Westminster [ q.v. ] , suggested him to Rome as coadjutor archbishop of Sydney , Australia .
21 " Frith could have killed El-ahrairah at once , but he had a mind to keep him in the world , because he needed him to sport and jest and play tricks .
22 He marries Julia Maplesone , whose extravagance lands him in the Fleet Prison , and who deserts him whilst he is there .
23 It costs a great deal to keep him in the home , as well as your father . ’
24 The man in the dock watched him in silence as he sat down heavily in his chair .
25 The second tactic he regards as an attempt to keep him in line .
26 ( Paradoxically the release of tension enabled him in the next week to run up , turn out , patch together , a poetical melodrama about Cabestainh with which the house-guests had some civilised fun . )
27 Transfer to the Admiralty enabled him in 1920 to attend evening classes in writing and illuminating at the Central School of Arts and Crafts .
28 He is required to disregard the interests of the institution appointing him in favour of the shareholders as a whole .
29 In 1318 , after an attempt to poison him in the previous year , John XXII thanked Margaret for sending him ‘ a certain knife-handle in serpentine form ’ which was reputed to detect poison .
30 His unflappability deserted him in the face of by-election reverses .
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