Example sentences of "[pron] he [vb -s] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I said I he goes like this , and he clicks his fingers and he goes erm I keep remembering holographs ho holograms are n't real , ha ha !
2 Future projects include a Canadian theatre production of Playboy Of The Western World , Flashback with Dennis Hopper and Renegades , a cop movie in which he stars alongside fellow young gun , Lou Diamond Phillips .
3 I mention this only because it is one of the dominant features in an inspector 's life , the shadow of which he feels at all times .
4 He shows his annoyance with some intimidating facial expression , backed up by a sparse selection of adjectival punctuation invariably using the ‘ f ’ word , which he uses with considerable effect .
5 The importance of Bakhtin 's method lies not simply in the formal identification of a genre or a subgenre or a chronotope , but also in the connection which he establishes between internal generic form and external history .
6 Bernstein , for instance , in his attempt to attribute less ‘ context-dependence ’ and greater ‘ objectivity ’ to certain language uses , correlated these characteristics with certain ‘ codes ’ which he identifies with certain social classes ( 1971 ) .
7 Gironella 's subject matter is the acclaimed artistic masterpieces of the Spanish past which he reworks in various ways , most dramatically into ironic altars assembled from a variety of painted , sculpted and ready-made elements ( Fig. 1 ) .
8 In an unmarked police car equipped with a speed detection computer , Peter Joslin , Warwickshire 's Chief Constable and head of Britain 's police traffic committee , showed us the type of driving which he blames for many fatal road crashes .
9 The ease with which he passes from provincial gaucheries to suave Franco-Italianate portraiture , which made him painter to King George III , is fully recorded .
10 Stories for de Man are , like Rousseau 's parable and Proust 's image , metalingual allegories , and this accounts for the ease with which he passes from specific examples to general rules about language .
11 Of the covenants by the tenant running with the land that " to pay rent or taxes " and " not to assign or underlet , " and by the landlord running with the reversion , " to renew the lease " are the most apposite of the instances which he quotes from decided cases .
12 But he keeps on spending as much as before , topping up his spending account with cash from the piggy-bank , which he replaces with little bits of paper saying that the spending account owes the piggy-bank money .
13 Over the years Skarsnik has amassed a large collection of Dwarf beard scalps which he displays on long wooden stakes driven into the mountain side .
14 In his speech , the Prime Minister set out the weak position from which he negotiates on economic and monetary union .
15 It was held that a manufacturer of products , which he sells in such a form as to show that he intends them to reach the ultimate consumer in the form in which they left him , with no reasonable possibility of intermediate examination , and with the knowledge that the absence of reasonable care in the preparation or putting up of the products will result in injury to the consumer 's life or property , owes a duty to the consumer to take reasonable care .
16 A manufacturer of products , which he sells in such a form as to show that he intends them –o reach the ultimate consumer in the form in which they left him , with no reasonable possibility of intermediate examination , and with the knowledge that the absence of reasonable care in the preparation or putting up of the products is likely to result in injury to the consumer 's life or property , owes a duty to the consumer to take reasonable care .
17 Lord Atkin laid down the narrow rule in Donoghue v Stevenson [ 1932 ] AC 562 : A manufacturer of products , which he sells in such a form as to show that he intends them to reach the ultimate consumer in the form in which they left him with no reasonable possibility of intermediate examination , and with the knowledge that the absence of reasonable care in the preparation or putting up of the products will result in an injury to the consumer 's life or property , owes a duty to the consumer to take reasonable care .
18 Here we meet a central theme : ca n't we demand that the doctor set out the principles on which he acts for all to see ?
19 According to Bede , who records the death of Penda in the battle of the Winwaed , which he places in 655 ( HE 111 , 24 ) , Penda ruled the Mercian nation for twenty-two years from his victory at Hatfield to his defeat at the Winwaed ( HE 11 , 20 ) , that is from 633 to 655 .
20 We shall consider the two studies which he reports in most detail , and which were most systematically carried out : a sentence completion study ( Piaget , 1928 ) , and a series of studies in which an adult interviewed children about causal phenomena ( Piaget , 1929 , 1930 ) .
21 Engels here , as elsewhere , is clearly influenced by the romantic nationalist tradition of nineteenth-century historians , and the praise which he lavishes on these groups , as well as the labelling of them as ‘ German ’ , is probably misplaces .
22 The lawyer advocates formal legal propositions which he supports with reasoned arguments .
23 This is why he calls the object of his study ‘ narrative discourse ’ , which he defines as ‘ the oral or written discourse which undertakes to tell of an event or a series of events ’ , and which he distinguishes from narrative as series of events ( story ) , and narrative as the act of narrating .
24 From which he accounts for 2 pipes of wine bought at Canterbury from Preston , 1 pipe at London , 1 tun at Canterbury by J. Boteler , 3 tuns at Sandwicum , 1 other tun at Canterbury and for the carriage of the same , £41 12s.2d .
25 A Partner-in-Residence shared between Christian Aid Scotland and the Church of Scotland , he is on secondment from the Zimbabwe Council of Churches which he serves as Senior Development Officer .
26 His article is particularly valuable for the evidence which he adduces from contemporary documents , some of which is of considerable importance in helping to determine the facts of Molla Fenari 's life ; but much of what he says is , as will be shown , based on so little genuine historical evidence ( insofar as this can be judged from the sources he quotes ) and appears so speculative that it must be treated with some caution .
27 Colleagues think he is ideal for the new job , because of the ease with which he communicates with different people and his breadth of vision .
28 Locke 's distinction between the real and nominal essence of substances , and the way in which the corpuscular hypothesis figures in his conception of the world , which he shares with other anti-scholastics of the time , is brought out nicely by his analogy of the Strasburg Cathedral clock .
29 These feelings tend to be transitory but some patients remain psychologically disturbed for many years and , in a few psychological difficulties develop in the convalescent period which were not apparent during the acute episode.While these problems can sometimes be anticipated in hospital on the basis of the patient 's reaction to his illness , and any premorbid difficulties which he has encountered in the past , a better idea of his potential can be gained by following him during the convalescent period to observe how he copes with the various stresses and strains which he encounters during this time .
30 It was through EP that Roy got involved in a project centred on upward feedback , a subject which he finds of great interest .
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