Example sentences of "[adv] [prep] [adj] [noun] he " in BNC.

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1 ‘ He never talked much about those things he did , ’ I said .
2 All through this conversation he had the impression that Frank no longer sneered ; and as he went back to Liverpool he was sure that he was more tolerant and sympathetic and ‘ was willing to grant that there was some sense in some of the things which I longed for him to share ’ .
3 All through this time he hardly had any painkillers as it was very important he did n't feel that he could use his leg before it was strong enough .
4 One of our first thoughts was to accommodate the sows outdoors , so for comparative purposes he has made the assumption that new purpose-built accommodation for 220 sows would be likely to cost £400 a sow .
5 It was , however , Minton 's habit to tire suddenly of young men he had previously made a fuss of , and Ricky was no exception .
6 In the final letter , written in 1768 , when he was in his late seventies and obviously under some stress he complains about the lack of co-operation from Solander and Ellis .
7 Together with three associates he was charged with organising 64,500 million yen in improper loans .
8 Once a day he was to practise his relaxation technique and his breathing exercise and then , in the privacy of his own bedroom , to try reading aloud from any book he chose .
9 ‘ Looking for the unicorn , ’ she repeated , saying ‘ looking ’ now instead of ‘ hunting ’ because perhaps in some way he was the protector of the beast .
10 All round that side he 's got bare bum .
11 So in other words he comes round and he says I I do n't want that there I want a little bit put there
12 So in other words he 's saying , you should look to history to try and understand what 's happening .
13 So in other words he makes a joke about his if they all looked like me , would n't that be awful .
14 The sad thing was , as I said before , his navigator was incapable — and I must say not good enough — to get him round the heavily defended areas , and so in two sorties he still sustained abnormal flak damage .
15 He had performed so brilliantly on other expeditions he became fully fledged climber .
16 The Telegraph commented : ‘ As Sir Alf [ pictured ] watched his team begin their first game together since last November he must have felt like a yachtsman who takes the winter covers off his boat , eases it into the water and finds it has sprung leaks fore , aft and midships . ’
17 So to that extent he represents sort of old fashioned moral values , you know , this sort of thing should n't be allowed to happen , it 's disgraceful .
18 Increasingly Moran could be seen in the fields staring idly at some task he should be completing .
19 Apparently at one time he was married to a young woman who was jealous of another woman .
20 In his move towards the latter , perhaps at that time he did not quite appreciate how influential to himself and others Roger Corman had become in providing the schooling for some of the most important film-makers of the second half of the twentieth century .
21 Perhaps at some point he smiles slightly to himself , so that Millie smiles , too , and says , ‘ What ? ’
22 Erm and then he 's talking , he 's going on to education which er obviously at this time he would think is very important erm because that 's how he would start the revolution , you know , i in the first place .
23 Just after New Year he said he was going camping in France .
24 Scholes 's case is the more telling in that he is far from being a conservative opponent of all recent developments in theory ; he has written favourably of structuralism , and unsympathetically about fictional realism ( for which , indeed , he has been attacked by Tallis ) , and elsewhere in Textual Power he finds deconstructive reading — as opposed to the theory underlying it — a useful critical method .
25 Nevertheless on such occasions he gave the impression to friends and acquaintances that in some ways he had mellowed .
26 Just at this time he was thinking about and drafting his meditation about home , namely the West Country , in the poem which became East Coker .
27 Somehow at that moment he was very far from being just part of the furniture .
28 All in all , he had been departmentally punished on twenty-seven occasions , an average of once for each year he had spent in the force .
29 More and more after these scenes he felt worn out , drained — as if his life were being slowly refined down to a point .
30 Reminded once more of recent liberties he had taken with her person , she flushed scarlet and , not deigning to answer , turned abruptly on her heel .
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