Example sentences of "[noun sg] [pron] [vb base] him [prep] " in BNC.

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1 With my best caricature British accent I reduce him to a fit of stifled giggles .
2 I , when , when we go down to playschool I walk but because it takes what fifteen minutes to walk into town I put him in the pushchair
3 During this period we find him in conflict with races who were very different to the Franks : the Slavs and Avars in the east and the Saracens in the south and west .
4 Is that the only name you know him by ? ’
5 ‘ As a pup he was always asleep , so one day we put him in a pair of pyjamas and started calling him PJ .
6 No I do n't , no that was just a nickname they give him for years ago , matter of fact I the other day , I was walking up and he called me , so I took me father 's name you see , nickname , that was .
7 Oh yes , every month I call him into the office and I say , it still is n't good enough , pull your socks up .
8 In a free-spending secret life , Brian Courtenay , former businessman , local councillor , Tory committee chairman and master of his masonic lodge , had got through £200,000 to £300,000 — leaving the woman who wed him as a virgin 38 years earlier , almost penniless and deep in debt .
9 They put Dagon upright again , but the next morning they find him in an even sorrier state .
10 He must be ready to speculate , for the sources ( in this case the chronicles and records of government which provide him with much of his material ) do not always come up to expectation .
11 He is a talented lad who shows great respect for his elders and will play in any position I tell him to .
12 It 's a promise I expect him to equal .
13 He could be photographed using the concept keyboard ( and outgrowing the available programmes ) , being squeezed half-way into a hotel loo ( as part of the Access Group ) or simply having a laugh with friends on the scheme who treat him as an equal .
14 ‘ There is every reason to remember George Bush 's achievements and the debt of gratitude we owe him for his leadership .
15 Letterman would like to see a first draft by the time I meet him in London .
16 First time I see him in his uniform , he looked that lovely I could 've eaten him alive .
17 First is the excitement of the sense of calling ; second , the passionate and painful struggles in overcoming sin which bring him into a darkness which initially is without savour or delight ; third , the experience of light and comfort in the darkness which he describes as the work of Christ illuminating the soul " with schynynges " ( 27.98r. – 345 ) ; and fourth , the full light and bliss of heaven which this light in the darkness anticipates .
18 The fact you box him round the ears to get the half point , true I think .
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