Example sentences of "[modal v] [adv] [verb] him [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | So long as a judge keeps silent his reputation for wisdom and impartiality remains unassailable : but every utterance which he makes in public , except in the course of the actual performance of his judicial duties , must necessarily bring him within the focus of criticism . |
2 | She hardly knew what she was saying ; only knew that she must somehow rouse him to movement . |
3 | It should also inform him of his right to apply to the court to purge his contempt . |
4 | ‘ I should also tell him about you . |
5 | I should really take him into that |
6 | He seemed to think she should simply take him at his word . |
7 | However , Barbarossa was still suspicious of the leader of the Guelphs , and when he resolved to go on crusade he ordered that Henry must either follow him to the Holy Land or return to exile in England for a further three years . |
8 | I think she should mentally wrap him in a parcel , tie it tight with string and put it on one side for the moment . |
9 | If the result was not one for Graham Turner to celebrate on the third anniversary of his takeover at Wolves , the manner of their performance should certainly cheer him on his 42nd birthday today . |
10 | " It 's odd how you always have to ask that question , that you 'll only see him through other men 's eyes . |
11 | Were n't you saying in the tent only yesterday : " When Charles has been beaten and stripped of his weapons , I 'll personally tonsure him as a cleric and take him back to Ravenna " ? |
12 | Yeah , well the easy way for them to assess him is have a look at his tests , and if he has n't done any , then they 'll just assess him on what he can do . |
13 | The letter is interesting , though , for the light it casts on his rooted dread of mental imbalance , and on his horrified feeling that the unsatisfactory relations which had existed between himself and his father since eariy adolescence might somehow mar him for the rest of his life : You and I are both qualified for it [ neurosis ] because we were both afraid of our fathers as children . |
14 | ‘ We 'll soon lick him into shape . ’ |
15 | Ignore it cos the man might just leave him in there renting it until or when forever it goes up . |
16 | In fact it might just finish him for good ! ’ |
17 | I might just take him on it ! |
18 | Despite her pleas Raja Pala insisted he would only return her wings if she first bore him a child , whose eyes might always remind him of the world she came from . |
19 | Although Rob , affectionately known as Mr Brora , has retired , you might still meet him in the shop that bears his name , now run by Colin Taylor , another well-respected and well-liked Brora angler . |
20 | I have a great thankfulness for having known him and worked with him and learnt so much from him , and somehow I feel we 'll always have him with us in his paintings and the West Riding countryside and schools . |
21 | I mean , I do n't swallow everything Morrissey says but I 'll always consider him worth listening to . ’ |
22 | Walsh added : ‘ I expect James 's ankle to be right but I 'll probably start him from the bench and let him make an explosive entrance . |
23 | On the drive back he considered whether the man were guilty of something more heinous than drinking champagne with a rich young woman on an afternoon when his constituents might reasonably expect him to be in the House of Commons . |
24 | David Adams , one of London 's leading technical experts has moved salons and you 'll now find him at Paul Windle 's salon in Covent Garden . |
25 | She might even pass him on the way up ! |
26 | And the Earl of Warwick might well provide him with additional escort . |
27 | My concern about the caravan site was only a kind of self-importance , and , as a result of my terrible selfishness poor Tom had been frightened in a way that might well scar him for much longer than that little stone . |
28 | What is called ‘ any benefit , or even any legal possibility of benefit , ’ in Mr. Smith 's notes to Cumber v. Wane , is not ( as I conceive ) that sort of benefit which a creditor may derive from getting payment of part of the money due to him from a debtor who might otherwise keep him at arm 's length , or possibly become insolvent , but is some independent benefit , actual or contingent , of a kind which might in law be a good and valuable consideration for any other sort of agreement not under seal . |
29 | I 'll never forgive him for involving Silvia in all this . |
30 | quite like , yeah , I 'll never forgive him for that , he 's now our troop 's sergeant , he 's got a transfer to the other squadron one of these troops , to er , to a troop . |