Example sentences of "[vb -s] he to [art] " in BNC.

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1 An exception is made in this instance because the policeman 's task in maintaining law and order exposes him to a greater risk of attack than other members of the public .
2 Alternatively , a person may place himself in a dangerous position which exposes him to the risk of involvement in the accident in which he is harmed .
3 The lion immediately jumps on him and forces him to the ground .
4 Cos that allows him to the cost ?
5 Sleep suggestions are made to encourage the subject to sever the critical awareness that normally links him to the external environment ; ‘ reality testing ’ has to be set aside .
6 Cain kills Abel — it is a short step from rebellion to bloodshed — and God condemns him to a nomadic life , but provides protection against death .
7 This leads him to a much wider generalization that the course of history , over space as well as time , is closely linked to the anthropological map .
8 His fascination leads him to an agency which administers mental implants , so that he can have the vicarious experience of interplanetary travel injected into his memory .
9 His examination of a number of important constitutional conventions leads him to the conclusion that they are united in character by the possession of a single purpose — to secure that Parliament and government are ultimately subject to the wishes of the electorate .
10 The boy or girl was not ‘ a blank piece of paper on which the teacher should write ’ , and it was in this liberal spirit that he condemned drill : ‘ Military drill fashions him to an approved standard as part of the machine ; whereas the aim of Scouting is to develop his personal character and initiative . ’
11 Crilly hugs my brother back warmly and introduces him to the languid one .
12 Long before New York 's Whitney Museum mounts its own assessment in 1994 , the present exhibition introduces him to an European audience .
13 So that which makes man vulnerable to the force of the leaping devil , also opens him to the effortless strength of the leaping God which is known through the experience of inadequacy .
14 She knocks Roberto out , ties him to a chair , and , brandishing a gun , tells her astonished husband she wants a trial here and now .
15 That evening , Philip , an ex-Merchant Taylors boy who has known Iain since prep school , is at home in his room when his mum calls him to the phone .
16 Ali lowers him to the ground , holding his left hand , and tries to get him to walk .
17 She takes him to a tailor ( hence the gorgeous green suit and bowler hat ) , hires a tutor and even buys him a car .
18 He takes him to a football training course , because he does n't like to think that he goes to play football on the park .
19 For forty days she banishes him to the stables and piggeries .
20 What he is asserting is that ‘ I have toothache ’ has meaning in virtue of pain-language taking the place of moaning ; and what he is denying is that saying this commits him to an experiential explanation of the meaning of pain-language .
21 Althusser 's abolition of the subject therefore commits him to an unequivocally holist account of social explanation .
22 It was this more than anything that impelled Havel into active opposition , and there 's little doubt that it 's his reputation as a truth-teller , a man whose word is to be trusted , that most commends him to a nation recovering from constitutional mendacity .
23 He then directs him to the message to the angel of the church at Laodicea in the third chapter of Revelation .
24 Cronenberg 's diagnosis sends him to the underground of the breed ; a secret tribe of shape changers and weirdos persecuted by the naturals .
25 Then goes he to the length of all his arm ,
26 This makes me wonder if it is the creative thought that guides the discoverer or whether it is the emotion that is the creative force that impels him to the solution .
27 He is engaged in conversation by McKendrick , another participant in the Colloquium , but does not reveal to him that what attracts him to the conference is the opportunity it affords him to go to the World Cup qualifying match between England and Czechoslovakia ( scene one ) .
28 The shop owner gives him to a little girl who needs him and cares for him .
29 In some much larger and loftier room on the first floor , with net curtains at the window and the mulberry tree at the back of the Scottish Office just beyond , Tite waves him to a seat .
30 Montag 's wife reports him to the Brigade and he is forced to flee , making his way to a place outside the city described by Clarisse , where a group of people have gathered together to memorise books , keeping the words immortal .
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