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

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1 One aim is to make the familiar look unfamiliar and he says it was only when he referred back to his photographs after completing many of his drawings that he realised what he had missed .
2 But he was OK and he sent her a big kiss .
3 She might lose him but for now he was as enslaved as she was and Maggie caressed him as he caressed her until his kisses grew more demanding and he turned her beneath him again .
4 Mr Wakerley said Sams ' first ransom plot involving Julie Dart went wrong and he killed her .
5 Well he took the old and he offered him out .
6 Having secured his freedom , his sexual appetite continued unabated and he threw himself into an even more vigorous life of carnal debauchery .
7 It came free and he threw it at me .
8 ‘ He was very candid and he gave me the benefit of his thinking about a lot of things , ’ Clinton told reporters after leaving the White House .
9 His face was flushed and damp and he mopped his forehead with a large handkerchief .
10 so anyway he went right on until the Saturday and he said look , on the Friday they called us in and they said look we 're gon na take him to the ward I 'm afraid there 's nothing else we can do , just deteriorating and he said there 's no
11 Just now the autumnal coolth was tonic and he breathed it in like drinking draughts of fresh milk , then took dippersful of water from the butt at the side of the house and sluiced his head into activity .
12 Their glasses were empty and he took them to the bar for a refill .
13 well in , in erm in erm Plymouth they 've got , they 've got this band called Erotica , they 've got another one called Boobs and all these different and he said they live up to their er names like .
14 Matisse comes at the end of a tradition of Renaissance illusionism and volumetric painting which is irrevocably shifting into something different and he wants it both ways , just as Giotto wanted it both ways .
15 The bruise on his ankle was cripplingly painful and he felt his forty-seven years .
16 He 's very , very clever and he teaches me sums and helps me with my homework .
17 ‘ Dad 's very , very clever and he teaches me sums ’
18 The spring rain soaked him but it was warm and he licked it as it trickled down his lip .
19 The policeman is civil and he lets me go , commenting on my eyesore of a car , warning me to get my tail-light repaired .
20 Sir Michael , now 88 , adds that the performance is very appropriate and he wishes it great success .
21 so I thought he , he 's changing things he 's saying well I do n't think this is suitable and I do n't think my way of tackling this is suitable because he 's used to dealing with different kids , although they 're a similar age , they 're not very motivated or mighty but they 're more motivated than these kids , but he says like he 'll turned back towards the black board and he 'll be writing and they 're shouting abuse at him , F ing and blinding and he says it makes me so angry because I do n't know the voices well enough to know who 's saying it
22 I remember when he always used to read out during the service before the sermon the previous week 's collection and it used to consist of the collection last Sunday consisted of one pensioning note , twenty ha'penny half crown pieces , forty florins and he 'd go all through the coinage down to the last ha'penny but erm oh I believe he was , he was er very aristocratic , very aristocratic , but er Father , cos he used to come over our house quite a lot when my mother was on the parochial church council , and er he had a curate that was quite leftish and he got himself on the old Board of Guardians and of course he used to sort of er go into the Labour Club and was quite of er father , he said to old Father one night he said erm he 's a funny chap your curate he said well he , he 's the son of a farm labourer he says and I 'm the son of a country squire and that 's the difference .
23 I arrived early and he led me upstairs to a comfortable polish-scented lounge and made coffee , before returning to the bar to finish off .
24 The mail arrived early and he opened his letters as he sat at the breakfast table .
25 His English was almost perfect and he told her he had treated several English people .
26 His lips hardened and he lifted her closer , cupping her head and kissing her deeply when she made no move to get away .
27 For a moment Obispal was unwary and he knows it .
28 He was slim and dark and he told her his name was Steve .
29 ‘ You 'll only waste it , ’ she said , and she was right and he knew it .
30 He just walked straight past me , oh well I 'm so sorry and he goes what 's wrong with you anyway lately ?
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