Example sentences of "[verb] him [prep] all the " in BNC.

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1 True , both the English and the Latin forms indicate he lived by the ash tree , but did they merely permit the taxatores to avoid confusing him with all the other Johns who lived in the same village ?
2 " Moustachio , " the US intelligence agent who had already visited him in February , returned.He met the Shah in the palace in Rabat and told him of all the dangers that the US systems would pose for him-lawsuits to find his money , congressional subpoenas and demonstrations .
3 Here , when Jacob meets his own brother , he meets him with all the courtly ceremony with which petty vassal princes used to greet their Pharaoh .
4 He had always been there and when she was little she had worshipped him with all the adulation of any little girl for a big , brave , older brother .
5 She had shot him for all the things he had done to her and her husband , shot him because , in the end , she still loved him , and it made his ultimate betrayal all the harder to bear .
6 ‘ I 'm sure he could have saved him with all the modern equipment we have .
7 After all her husband is in Venice- and she had n't seen him in all the war years , ’ he said .
8 Naturally , in view of the political interest of Lord Milton and the Duke of Argyll , John Main was not left to languish in the state of promoted unemployment to which Colonel Haldane 's enmity had consigned him , but although they were able to secure a port appointment for Main which brought him a regular salary , it was at Bo'ness , on the Lothian shore of the river Forth and directly under they eye of Haldane 's ally , Collector Middleton , who sent the unfortunate Main ‘ on every drudgery piece of business to different places to put him to all the expence & trouble the Collector can devise ’ .
9 Her hands were in his dark hair , her mouth kissing him with all the love and desire she had suppressed for so long .
10 I challenged him with all the dishonesty he had shown and all the damage he was doing to the paper .
11 As he approached his defeated enemy , he felt no sense of triumph , which surprised him after all the frustrating years of hunting him down .
12 They had spent half an hour with the President , the Director sitting back and letting Rostov take him through all the details of the last few weeks .
13 We would also like to thank him for all the hard work he put into Lee Green .
14 Deeply suspicious of his motives , she treated him with all the most obvious display of distrust of which she was capable , but her efforts seemed to leave him cold , so she decided there was only one course left open to her .
15 While the EC was debating its approach to the problems of Eastern Europe the president-elect of another distressed part of the world was nearing the end of a pre-inaugural tour which took him to all the major capitals .
16 He took him to all the different workshops de Chavigny maintained in different parts of Paris : he let him watch these highly skilled men at work , the specialists in metalwork , the specialists in inlay work and enamels , the gem-cutters , the gem-setters , the team of men who made the mechanisms for clocks and watches .
17 In the strengthening light , Cassie saw him with all the clarity and shock of their first encounter , and her flesh shivered with excitement , as it had done even then .
18 Warmed by Coleman 's sympathy , El-Jorr made a point of introducing him to all the CIs and ‘ mules ’ who arrived at Eurame on their way back and forth along the pipeline , including him in the conversation as they brewed up endless cups of Lebanese coffee .
19 That small part of the Doctor 's character that allowed for scepticism reminded him of all the times such naivety had landed him in trouble before .
20 The poet was a member of polite society addressing himself to his equals , and though poetry was a special mode of communication it did not exempt him from all the normal usages of polite society .
21 Apparently he 'd fixed up with the travel agency which handled Dalgety 's bookings for you to join him at all the Grands Prix . ’
22 She ached to remind him of all the wasted evenings with prospective investors : the long , boring meals with pompous bankers and their dull , provincial wives .
23 She glared accusingly at him , investing him with all the blame for Timothy Gedge 's presence in the garden .
24 She leant down and started to lick out his ear , bit his lobes , started to tell him of all the things she had done with other men .
25 The trick is to find a feed that your horse enjoys and which provides him with all the nutrients he requires to do the work you are asking of him .
26 Earlier he had visited the American Consulate , where an attractive and sympathetic fellow countrywoman from North Carolina had advised him on all the sad yet necessary procedures consequent upon the death of an American national in Britain , and acquainted him with the costs of the transatlantic conveyancing of corpses .
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