Example sentences of "[noun] [prep] he at [det] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Yanto felt a surge of cold anger course through him at this blatant piece of exhibitionism .
2 Take this one , for example ; walking along the canal towpath at this late hour of the night , as if it was the park on a pleasant Sunday afternoon and life held no dangers for him at all .
3 There 's no harm in him at all . ’
4 We have another description of him at this date from a diarist who happened to meet him .
5 ‘ I do n't like the look of him at all , ’ said Angalo .
6 You must stand guard over him at all times . ’
7 Kept guard over him at all . ’
8 The small series I 've being doing of the guy with the cap on , he does n't have any goodness about him at all .
9 The small series I 've being doing of the guy with the cap on , he does n't have any goodness about him at all .
10 Had he had the same nightmare at any other time , it might have had no particular meaning to him at all .
11 By the way , do you have a name for him at all ?
12 No news of him at all ?
13 After some months of working with him it gradually emerged that although he had indeed identified his wife 's body he had had a member of the hospital staff with him at all times .
14 When , for example , a solicitor is recruited as a specialist to head up a new department it would be appropriate to seek some commitment from him at any rate in the medium term .
15 You 've got no control over him at all have you ?
16 Richard was the kind of man who has two clean handkerchiefs on him at half past three in the morning .
17 And then , when she knew she did n't want to have sex with him at all , she was pregnant .
18 If she could have gone to bed with him at that moment it would have been all right .
19 ‘ The coercion may of course be of different kinds , it may be in the grossest form , such as actual confinement or violence , or a person in the last days or hours of life may have become so weak and feeble , that a very little pressure will be sufficient to bring about the desired result , and it may even be , that the mere talking to him at that stage of illness and pressing something upon him may so fatigue the brain , that the sick person may be induced , for quietness ' sake , to do anything .
20 For her the world was full of young men whose bodies were untainted by disease and these — he persuaded himself — were the ones she really craved , having no care for him at all , except some morbid interest in a diseased thing , which , presently , she would thrust aside with a disdainful shudder .
21 A young Cornish shoemaker married at the time he was setting up on his own : " his wife 's immediate fortune was ten pounds — a sum to him at that time , of great importance " .
22 There was also the crazy lifestyle , in particular , with Bettye Fulford , the woman he became disengaged to when he learned she was 39 not 29 and who served a parternity order on him at this year 's US Masters .
23 Here John learned to appreciate the material things in life and in later years he allowed journalists to make the mistake of attributing John George 's wealth and position to him at this time .
24 A piece of land that had held no particular interest for him at all until the arrival of its new estate manager .
25 The contempt which Anderson seems to have for McKendrick in scene sixteen ( which , as we shall see later , is also suggested by the level of politeness he uses ) is strongly marked by the fact that he allocates no turns to him at all .
26 But I do n't know anybody in there who has n't had a really good shout at him at some point , and that 's all , that 's including A O's
27 One engraving by him at this period was ‘ A View of Castle Street , Liverpool , ’ painted by Fernel .
  Next page