Example sentences of "[pers pn] [adv] [vb -s] he [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Instead , she guides him to check his suggestion and when he realises that he is not successful , she skilfully involves him in the final solution to the problem .
2 When he discovers that Mary helps people , collects for Biafra and has protested against the Vietnam War , he is not happy because she suddenly reminds him of his mother .
3 She 's taking advantage of him , she only wants him for his money .
4 At the moment , she just loves him as a friend .
5 She still sees him in a business capacity which I find ‘ odd ’ .
6 If she makes sure she is looking good , feeling good , working well , she has a better chance of taking a cool look at him from a distance and deciding if she really wants him in her life .
7 Once the physiotherapist is confident that the patient has gained full control of his hemiplegic leg while making sideways steps , she then guides him through a sequence of forward steps , starting with the normal leg , transferring the weight onto that leg to move the hemiplegic leg , and maintaining good control of the pelvis during the movement .
8 She sometimes lights him into a new kind of relationship .
9 Now however , it only fills him with horror , the chill marble is like the cold of the corpse .
10 He aptly compares him to Edmund Wilson , as a stylist , and one feels Orwell 's formula could easily have been returned : about as good a writer as one can be while holding untenable opinions .
11 This suspension can absorb a bump so quickly that the driver hardly senses it , yet it still keeps him in perfect control of the car .
12 He takes his belt to him — I try to hide him sometimes , but he always finds him in the end .
13 It also reminds him of possibly his darkest day in the game .
14 He thinks this keeps him on his mettle , but it often leaves him at a loss for the right word .
15 The disadvantage of doing that to my mind is it simply prompts him into doing something .
16 Since his involvement in struggling does not necessarily imply that he will actually get free , it simply places him before the getting free which he aims to realize .
17 Indeed , some have argued that the ‘ traditionalism of his general philosophy is so strong that it virtually disables him from that critical rationalism which is essential for the appraisal of particular traditions ’ .
18 He then directs him to the message to the angel of the church at Laodicea in the third chapter of Revelation .
19 It certainly puts him in a different frame of mind , for on hearing it he resolves to beg forgiveness of his mistress for being jealous ( ex.13 ) .
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