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

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1 Introducing his Scottish front bench team today , Mr Robertson also made it clear that he wants all forty-nine Scottish Labour MPs to be involved in developing policy and strategy .
2 It is particularly interesting that he notes that science has come to hold , for some , the status of a religion : students of the arts , for example , might regard science as ‘ mystical ’ .
3 Sebastian de Ferranti , Basil 's brother and now a director of Ferranti 's competitor GEC , is a trustee of the interests but it is not clear whether he shares these views .
4 When a blacksmith grows big muscles , he makes more of certain kinds of proteins , but it is doubtful whether he makes any new ones .
5 Instead , he rambles on some more , to ask why he is still unemployed when he feels such a sense of renewal .
6 Jim'£s chances of winning are tremendous when he plays each point as though it was match point . ’
7 People throughout Teesdale are very friendly and he knows most of his passengers by name , he said .
8 ( a ) The accused is guilty if he assumes any of the rights of the owner .
9 I am glad that he finds such favour with the Opposition .
10 How many such stories lie hidden from us we can not tell ; but we can be sure that he reflects many of the aspirations of his day : as a merchant on land and sea , in the Baltic , the North Sea and the Mediterranean ; as a pilgrim to the shrines of England and Scotland , to Saint-Gilles , to St Peter and to Jerusalem , he accomplished what many others were doing , and far more aspired to .
11 Hey ! ’ of 1927 , Eliot judged John Rodker ‘ up-to-the-minute , if anyone is ; we feel sure that he knows all about hormones , W. H. R. Rivers , and the Mongol in our midst ’ .
12 The managing director makes very sure that he knows all that goes on in his firm .
13 And anyway it 's this bas er ba baseball player and he does n't hit the ball you see , which ma does n't make him famous so he finds this person and he makes him go back and he does hit the ball and becomes really famous and that special person 's Michael Caine , it looked quite good .
14 Erm I 'm not quite sure if he gives any detail on sort of no , he does n't .
15 Also the plaintiff 's doctor may be present if he has some active part to play , for example to explain a long and complicated medical history , his own diagnosis or to bring his own evidence up to date .
16 He does not go abroad much which is as well since he has little sense of direction and has twice been found many miles from home wandering the streets .
17 I do not want to add to the controversy that we had earlier by saying that , yet again — and I congratulate them on this — our colleagues have obtained more in the English legislation than we have — The Minister indicates dissent , but I won the last argument and I am not sure whether he wants another one at this late hour .
18 When a therapist becomes aware that such a situation is developing it is most important that he discusses this with the patient and sets very clear limits on the relationship .
19 ‘ And he would n't be the first man to become deeply jealous when he sees another man apparently usurping his role as a father . ’
20 He 's returning to somewhere safe when he does that , she thought .
21 Erm erm and then he was going spare and he says these are the worst I 've ever received in all the years I 've been teaching , right ?
22 What is important is that he is grinning as he says this , denoting playfulness , and Catherine is distressed by the idea .
23 Graham Hough is surely only partially accurate when he claims that
24 Having tried unsuccessfully to reach him through his office — he edits a weekly newspaper for veterans of the wartime resistance — I decided finally to drive out to the village of Roztoky where he spends much of his time .
25 ( This is close to Ritchie 's position , but not identical since he neglects this last point and puts the dog too hastily in the grave . )
26 Huntington is shrewd when he reveals many implications in Wells 's prose , and ends by making useful distinctions between utopia and dystopia , which he reviews as related , and anti-utopia , which he views as opposed to the other two .
27 It 's nice that he does that — you know , comes and feeds the birds like that .
28 By the time a patient comes to consult me ( of any other professional therapist for that matter ) , he is aware that he has some sort of problem in his life and that he wants to get to the bottom of it .
29 But it is also true that he describes this final state as one illumined so as " forto se by vnderstondyng whilk is god , and also gostly thynges with a soft swete brennand loue in hym " ( 8.282b. – 82 ) ; and in Mixed Life Rachel is also defined as " of bigynnynge is God , and bitokene liyf contemplatif " ( 30 – 1.342 – 3 ) .
30 ‘ Mr Bishop 'll go mad when he sees this lot . ’
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