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

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1 That made him the perfect fling .
2 They moved on after that , with Jessica dropping in bits about Parr as they occurred to her — although not that she was due to meet him the next day .
3 An extraordinarily high proportion of Milton scholars have chosen to disregard these truths about their subject , and have decided that because Milton was on the side of the regicides this made him a revolutionary and , because a revolutionary , therefore a man of the Left , perhaps even an agonized Maminst , or at least a sympathizer with the Diggers and Levellers of his own day .
4 This made him the intellectual heir of John Hunter , whose Essays and Observations he published with due filial piety in 1861 .
5 This made him the ideal choice to fly this naval fighter .
6 Some would say this made him the ideal publisher of a newspaper .
7 This made him an acceptable candidate as protector and , once he held that office , helped to ensure that he could call on the backing of the Yorkist establishment .
8 This made him an acceptable candidate as protector and , once he held that office , helped to ensure that he could call on the backing of the Yorkist establishment .
9 Ever a man for taking the particular to exhibit the general , this allowed him a global crack at the Scots : he claimed that they were not interested in doing anything unless it had natural awkwardness in it : ‘ What can not be done without some uncommon trouble or particular expedient , will not often be done at all .
10 It was , alas , only too derivative , but given its auteur 's antecedents everyone was prepared to give him a second chance .
11 There can be little doubt as to what in the way of topics and register the Host expects in the Monk 's Tale ; he concludes his observations on Melibee with : and continues with a description of the Monk that matches with the impression " Chaucer " claims to have of the Monk in the General Prologue , of a " " manly man " " , straining at the bounds of what is allowed to a monk ( and not dissimilar to the monk of the Shipman 's Tale ) : After nearly a hundred stanzas of the Monk 's tragedies , the Host is prepared to give him a second chance , as " Chaucer " had , but feels this time he has to be more specific as to what is wanted : But as soon as the Monk speaks we have the opportunity to see , firstly , that his reaction does not suggest he is flattered or pleased by the Host 's appraisal of him , and secondly that he sounds quite different from the bold and thrusting " man 's man " that " Chaucer " and the Host would make of him : Note how the Monk 's desire to offer literature that " " sowneth into honestee " " anticipates Chaucer the prosist 's retraction of the tales " " that sownen into synne " " .
12 When piling the buttercream on to the teddy 's body , try to mound it up quite high to give him a tubby appearance .
13 EVER since I saw David Bellamy disappearing down a crack in a garden path to demonstrate that we all had our own ‘ personal schooool of evolution ’ close at hand , I have been prepared to concede him an eternal place among the inexorably tenacious .
14 Even the genial Binkie Beaumont was prepared to pay him a third of what the experienced Emlyn Williams knew he was worth and could get .
15 His 67 gave him a nine-under total , two better than Faldo .
16 Mr Wilson says this gave him a different approach as well as a wider experience of business .
17 This gave him a one-stroke advantage over two players -Bill Nicolson , of Coventry , who had 73 , 69 , and Richard Latham , a local player , who managed 70 , 72 .
18 Darling finished the tour with 1022 runs at 34.07 , but in that strong batting line-up this gave him no better than eighth place .
19 This gave him an endless shopping list of radical causes which had no apparent connection , but were bound together by the radical-chic lifestyle of their supporters .
20 This gave him an invaluable insight into the boardroom and helped to bridge the gap between financial controller and finance director .
21 John Watson tends to regard himself as Mike 's adopted father , but Mike has inherited the substantial Lester shareholding and this gives him a considerable amount of independence ( which is not always to John Watson 's taste ) .
22 This gives him an additional +1 attack in close combat .
23 This gives him an unrivalled knowledge of the way in which banks operate , and contacts inside them .
24 Some call him a good bread-and-butter player , but he has not apparent weaknesses .
25 This earned him the unusual distinction of being elected to a fellowship of the society at the age of twenty-five ( 1852 ) .
26 This left him an enormous amount of scope for demonstrating the kind of narrative energy that most English fiction-writers would have given a great deal to acquire .
27 This makes him a good friend .
28 One would even be delighted to give him a helping hand .
29 The fate that befell him in the 1956 Grand National booked him a permanent place not only in the reminiscences of racing folk but in the British national memory .
30 Indeed , they are likely to win him a new reputation as a man for whom the boom never ended .
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