Example sentences of "[verb] [pers pn] from his [adj] " in BNC.

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1 The barrister , too , may find that such facts are missing from his brief , and have to extract them from his instructing solicitor in conference .
2 ‘ My dear Gwendolen , ’ he cut in impatiently , disengaging her from his new blazer .
3 He did n't let memory divert him from his present pleasure , but found his rhythm ; long , slow strokes .
4 A great adventure , a fitting enterprise for one who had known herself from infancy to be set apart for some rare destiny , and one that she had thought herself to have pursued courageously , successfully , with a redeeming love that had rescued even the anguished , complex , hostile Aaron , and had saved him from his wilder flights .
5 Sweat dewed her lashes as she unbuttoned his white shirt , pushing it from his broad shoulders , running her hands over his flesh , pulling him closer , her mouth as hungry as his .
6 Our system of criminal justice demands that the government seeking to punish an individual produce the evidence by its own independent labours , rather than by the cruel , simple expedient of compelling it from his own mouth .
7 For the first time in his life Karelius realized how narrow was the gap separating him from his pagan ancestors , the Germanic warriors of a thousand years before .
8 I thought it probable the police were right , he had sought revenge against Imogen Surkov for separating him from his nice third wife , Vera , and their son .
9 ‘ Give him a fair trial , ’ the fat bastard roared , ‘ and then hang him from his own gate ! ’ )
10 She had to hear it from his own lips , even if it meant that part of her died .
11 But Coleridge soon discovered the shortcomings of Clevedon , and especially the inconvenient distance separating it from his literary friends in Bristol , and from the indispensable Bristol City Library .
12 All manner of villain tries to tempt him , divert him , or separate him from his small savings .
13 But Fogerty 's Hollywood dreams will not deter him from his other ambitions — such as becoming a League international just like his dad Terry .
14 Fred , the eldest son , was never interested in the business , his homosexuality and leaning towards the arts alienating him from his conservative father .
15 In it collided two incompatible forces , mental and emotional , alienating him from his own tradition — to which he was deeply fettered .
16 and pluck him from his halcyon pied-a-terre ?
17 He had been searching for Morthen , to protect her from his violent half-brother , but she was nowhere to be found .
18 But she had told him his daughter had been fathered by another man and she had tried to separate him from his main interest in life , the Club .
19 German idealism was born out of a rejection of British empiricism : Immanuel Kant famously declared that it was David Hume who had woken him from his dogmatic slumbers .
20 ‘ Strum Guard ’ is a term used solely by Joe Strummer to describe the bandana taped around his right hand to protect it from his own vigorous guitar-flailing .
21 Though he now said that he was ‘ no longer very much interested in my own theories about poetic drama , especially those put forward before 1934 ’ , the old interests which had fascinated him from his first dramatic Fragments continued to grip him , leading to the fact that each of his dramas had as its ‘ sort of springboard ’ a ‘ Greek myth ’ .
22 A great storm blew up as he approached the island , as if the elements themselves were trying to drive him from his chosen path .
23 Election Comment : Albany at Large : Watch the birdie PRESIDENT Mitterrand did not allow last week 's premiership crisis to deflect him from his usual Monday morning pastime : playing golf at St Cloud , near Paris .
24 Champ had pined for his master since police took him from his old home .
25 ‘ I 've heard it from his own mouth , Ari , ’ Roirbak said gently .
26 The negative side of all this was ben Eliezer 's polemics against straight-faced , over-serious rabbinism ; against those whose understanding of God 's nature was austere and unfatherly ; those who , while seeking to elevate the Most High , merely put him out of touch with his own children ; debarred them from his welcoming presence by a system or learning that became ‘ frivolous ’ in its intensity : not that its perpetrators could be frivolous : black was their colour , even as severity was their posture — as becomes the frozen-in-soul .
27 He never reacted hostilely to any such suggestion , except to say to me that she was difficult enough in a friendly association and matters might be worse ( his own words ) if he took any action to remove her from his political scene .
28 This wife stood by her afflicted husband and even expressed fears about what might happen if the firm were to remove him from his electronic friend : ‘ I know it sounds funny , but I 'm afraid that losing that computer may break his heart . ’
29 She cast a quick look towards the bar ; praying that Rune would soon return and save her from his mischievous lover .
30 Just as his political commitments exiled him from his own class , so my politics involve an awkward relationship with my own class .
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