Example sentences of "[conj] he [vb -s] the [det] " in BNC.

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1 A speaker somehow ‘ translates ’ his ideas or thoughts into spoken or written signs , he ‘ encodes ’ them , and the hearer translates them back again , he ‘ decodes ’ them , so that he has the same thoughts , near enough , as the speaker .
2 The hon. Gentleman will forgive me if I say that he has the same problem with me that I have with the Whips Office .
3 ‘ Yes , and he feels the same way .
4 As they sway and raise their arms , he sees thirty pairs of large breasts and he imagines the same quantity of round thighs rolling and separating under the cassocks which he has had sent from Raleigh .
5 ‘ Mickey has played at the highest level and he gets the same thing out of the game as he has always done .
6 If you notice , when he speaks he tends to run words together towards the end of sentences and he does the same when he writes . ’
7 And he does the same job as you ?
8 and he wants the same facility with his left as with his right .
9 Ford 's solos are the record 's most exciting moments and he makes the most of the time allotted to them .
10 The social anthropologist is equally , of course , an entrepreneur whose special expertise lies in mediating between exotic cultures and his own , and he has the same vested interests as other go-betweens .
11 He looks like Sir Hugo , and he has the same evil character .
12 If he suffers the same fate as Clark , it could well cost him a place in the squad for the most vital game in Newcastle 's 100-year history .
13 But if he borrows the same amount a second time he becomes liable to a second charge .
14 But he displays the same choosiness in this area too : ‘ I find most of the things on television are pretty repetitive .
15 The latter he rejects because it is clear the Irish are too barbarous even to be Spanish , but he supports the former account of origins .
16 But he treats the former , unpejoratively , as an aspect of grammatical neutrality and obviousness designed to permit communication to a mass audience , and to represent the everyday context ; and the latter not as ‘ false ’ but as ‘ interruptions ’ of the grammar , relatively autonomous ‘ metaphors ’ , intuitively selected but acting ‘ like tiny reservoirs briefly holding the social significations of the moment ’ .
17 Eddie gets the best lines , perhaps because he has the most lines .
18 Well football pools are a splendid started because recently somebody has won just over nine hundred thousand pounds , and it 's interesting to note that he did this without exercising too much skill , as I 'm sure he 'd be the first to admit , because he enters the same numbers every week .
19 While he does the latter , his brother , whose name means " deceit " , trumps him by stealing his trousers from him , much to Travers 's amusement and Haimet 's embarrassment .
20 Two weeks later , the same friend is walking down Oxford Street when he sees the same man with the same two gorillas .
21 It was not a lesson , according to Mayhew , that the poor in fact needed to learn , for he finds the same scrupulous cleanliness in the poorest of London tenements , where every object in sight from chairs to children seems to have been that moment newly scrubbed .
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