Example sentences of "[noun sg] he [vb -s] [pron] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 In spring he dons his curious plumage : long ear tufts , and dramatic barred , streaked , blobbed or plain ruff-collar .
2 Leaving the Chelsea Arts Club he unlocks his fluorescent green mountain bike , which has a child 's seat on the crossbar .
3 He falls asleep with his head on her grave mound , to be taken away in spirit to a strange land where all his grief suddenly fades — and where to his utter delight he sees his lost child facing him , on the other side of a river .
4 At one point he describes his two colleagues as cheerfully admitting that they could not write very well .
5 The jokes and the conversations end abruptly with ‘ But this is worshipful society ’ and at that point he shows his real toughness and ambition .
6 Far from calling himself a god he admits his own inadequacies — he can not rebuild the dome , he can not claim to have fed on honey-dew and drunk the Milk of paradise .
7 This encounter is n't Tyson 's only connection with Satriani ; as a one time pupil he remembers his unorthodox teaching style .
8 In two days we get everything we want and for the rest of the week he has his Christian customers .
9 As an adult he protects their future interests .
10 Of Merovech he records nothing other than his supposed descent from Chlodio and that he was the father of Childeric .
11 Mike , born in 1938 , did his national service in the RAF ; after early retirement from a teaching career he devotes himself full-time to his lifelong interest in the organisational and OOB aspects of almost all periods of military and naval history , and offers a paid service to researchers in his field of interest .
12 As a manager he remains his own greatest fan and although his playing days are over , he was probably the most creative player on Rangers ' books : a genius in search of a mirror .
13 The new hero , like Don Quixote , gets it wrong by study , but unlike Quixote he gets it right ( more or less ) by living , and he characteristically needs to educate himself by life after having partly de-educated himself through books .
14 As a result Robin 's stomach is in turmoil throughout the ceremony and the evening of the wedding ; in the marital bed he tells his new wife what has happened .
15 And if he decides to be a member of the Government he resigns his parliamentary seat and his replacement takes over without the need for a by-election .
16 In the opening soliloquy he declares his true intent : then Clarence will go to prison this day .
17 In the diver-picture he shows himself ready to adumbrate the idea of a spatial setting , but he is far more cautious and conventional than his Etruscan predecessor .
18 At present he combines his voluntary police work with a job driving for the Post Office in Darlington .
19 At present he combines his voluntary police work with a job driving for the Post Office .
20 In Ego Dormio he explains to the Sister that as she grows in her love of Christ , she will find nothing matters to her but this love and the sin of man which disfigures it , and that all this is focused by thinking on the Passion of Christ : Although in The Form he makes it clear to Margaret that it is difficult to be too prescriptive about meditation , since God will put the kind of thoughts into her heart that are right for her , he does say in Emendatio Vitae that beginners in spiritual life may find the words of others helpful ( 8.120.31 – 2 ) and on occasions he himself wrote meditations on the Passion which embody his understanding of the catalysis they are designed to help .
21 In the end he does it all and more .
22 The way he wears you down , the way he bleeds you white — if his name were Julian Barnes , he would have long been known as the Glacier .
23 The way he proffers his open hand before this difficult feat of balance draws attention to the vital part to be played by all heroes in classical ballet .
24 In it he said of Mrs Thatcher , in the jocular way he addresses us all : ‘ I wish that cow would resign . ’
25 This is both for the purposes of common courtesy but also as it may have an important bearing on the way he discharges his own continuing professional responsibilities .
26 This year he hopes his latest designs will take his charity total to £45,000 .
27 But when he gets to his destination he swaps his turbocharged Navajo for a motorised skateboard .
28 In retrospect he finds it extraordinary that , with all the drinking he did , Philby was able to maintain his double life .
29 Likewise , if you wish your youngster to persist with a task after he has learned to do it , you should arrange things so that he is no longer rewarded every time he gets it right ( 'continuous reinforcement' is applicable , as we saw , only when the individual is acquiring a skill ) but only on the odd occasion ( a schedule called ‘ intermittent reinforcement ’ ) .
30 These lonely hours may be the time he reaches his deepest despair .
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