Example sentences of "[adv] he [adv] [verb] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Worse , he told her that naturally he never used the lifts because if one were faulty he could be stuck a long time with no one to free him .
2 Apparently he repeatedly climbed the town wall during his stay to watch for his pursuers .
3 Apparently he always reckoned a pretty girl with a lovely smile was more important than any other quality ; so the teeth had to be good .
4 Perhaps he even drops a Kit-Kat wrapper .
5 Perhaps he also had an inkling of an altogether more thorough-going solution .
6 Perhaps he merely wanted the signal to be read in that way .
7 Perhaps he never noticed the .
8 Perhaps he still has a chance , ’ said a western diplomat in Pakistan , ‘ but it looks as though events have overtaken him .
9 Perhaps he only wanted a cigarette , or a couple of bob for the meter .
10 So he wisely avoided a clash of horns in front of the herd .
11 So he simply made a convincing artificial one to hide his miniaturized booty , and the Vadinamia 's missed it — because when he left he was just the same as when he arrived .
12 If he does attempt to do so he either receives a negative reply or causes the officer of that other authority to send a copy of the correspondence to his own chief executive or clerk .
13 So he immediately declared the whole road unfit for parking .
14 Even so he only mentions the art of Gandhara , and this only because of a supposed influence on it by Classical art which he says ‘ helped the Indians to create an image of their saviours ’ .
15 So he then clothed the Prodigal in his love . ’
16 He did so he actually organized the funeral .
17 So he always remembers the time he went to this He 's no idea who 's funeral he was at but he just went along and then he was taken to see the family .
18 So he never drinks no more .
19 So he never sees the poverty .
20 And when my grandfather came in he always had a pocketful of these tips , and he would give us all some sixpences and some threepennies . ’
21 There 's a reason the little corner shops do that you see , that corner shop especially he always has a blackboard outside
22 As she turned away he gently caught the nape of her neck with his free hand .
23 By now he was used to spending longer and longer periods alone , yet in that moment when she walked away he always experienced a brief sense of loss that made him want to rush after her and beg her not to go .
24 Meanwhile he separately interviewed the vicar , and churchwardens , and opposing groups of parishioners , and tried to get conciliation , and persuaded the lawyers to postpone the court while he tried conciliation ; all to no purpose .
25 He used to be stopped frequently after work and normally he just told the constable he was a policeman straight away .
26 Does not he equally expect the rule of law to be observed on both sides of the Irish border ?
27 trustees comprise persons for the purposes of income tax ; 2. they comprise a separate entity liable to tax on monies they receive or which they are entitled to receive ; 3. the main inroads into that separateness and liability are of a restricted nature as explained in the Reid 's Trustees case ; these inroads are : ( a ) in certain cases ( but not all ) where a trustee mandates income direct to a beneficiary the trustee will not be liable to tax ( Williams v Singer ) ; ( b ) in the case of a life interest trust a see-through or conduit approach is adopted for identification of source purposes so that the origin and parentage of the income is not changed by virtue of its journey through the trust ( Archer-Shee v Baker ) ; ( c ) if income arises to the trustees of a life interest trust ( subject to deductions for expenses ) it is taxable upon the life tenant whether or not he actually takes the money ( Spen 's case ) .
28 Usually he just takes the line of least resistance .
29 He had his own clergy attached to his cathedral , and gradually he eventually acquired a parish clergy over whom he could sometimes exercise control .
30 But yesterday he happily grasped the handles of her frilly carrycot as the Stewarts set off for Los Angeles .
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