Example sentences of "[adv] he [verb] [det] [prep] " in BNC.
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1 | To him it appeared as a sceptre , not as a sword , and perhaps he took this as a sign . |
2 | ‘ Perhaps he imagined most of it . |
3 | ‘ Perhaps he needs some of those drops again , Thorny . |
4 | Perhaps he did some of the work on them , but I do n't believe he did everything sold under his name . ’ |
5 | These are forbidden by our law , which is called the Yasa , and so he killed both of them . |
6 | down into his arteries and we ca n't get anything down there so they 're blocked , but he said how the hell he survived that op I do n't know he said they could 've done more with his legs but it meant another hour and a quarter minutes in surgery , and he said he 'd had enough we could n't have kept him on the table a minute longer so he said all we can do is wait , so now mum said well he 's alright in intensive care , he 's responding well , getting over the operation well , but what we was worried about was him breathing on his own , had he , had he been you see , anyway he said this on er Thursday |
7 | Luke nodded , apparently satisfied , and on the journey home he spent much of his time behind a newspaper . |
8 | ‘ Also he knew all about the work I was doing . |
9 | Yeah , he was also he said most of them , he said er |
10 | And the people doing it in these garages erm , you know like respraying and doing all the welding and everything , really he said some of the things they were doing if they did it legally they 'd make a good go of it |
11 | Now he thinks more of her than he did of these , when they were babies . |
12 | now he did that with ease , you know . |
13 | Most often he remembers those in distress , on trial , in exile , in prison or slaves in the galleys . |
14 | Well he does that on every questionnaire , but he still has got to get someone to double check it . |
15 | well he did that for a while |
16 | Engels re-echoes The German Ideology in showing that far from the State being the repository of justice , it is the repository of exploitation , but here he does this by use of genuine anthropological materials . |
17 | Here he says that of all cases of hypertrophy of the external genitalia in women , physicians are most frequently consulted regarding the nymphae ( the inner labia ) and the clitoris , and that the causes of this condition , though not well understood , might be due to ‘ masturbation , excessive venery , or even the rubbing incident to a pruritis ’ . |
18 | It 's here he spent much of his childhood , learning the secrets of the wood , which appear in his latest book . |
19 | Okay so this strikes us as a rather eccentric claim er he does qualify it , he says that there may be cases where there are n't enough people of independent means in a country to present themselves , he does n't mean England here he means some of the dependent territories and then members of parliament should be paid compensation rather than a salary . |
20 | But secretly he spent much of his time and most of his clients ' money living the good life in America and Spain . |
21 | Eventually he owned most of the country between Bath and Malmesbury , an estate that he covered with a complete range of model estate buildings , from tiny farm workers ' cottages to his great house at Grittleton . |
22 | Sometimes he does this by changing his sources . |
23 | The novel handles the subject brusquely , whereas a notebook entry about Stavrogin back in the Spring of 1870 suggests a position midway between Svidrigailov and Kirillov : ‘ Sometimes he complains all of a sudden : ‘ I 'm bored ! ' ’ |
24 | But then he murmured half under his breath something to the effect that ‘ the boy had cost him much suffering ’ . |
25 | In the following year these became even tougher : he demanded the crown of France ; then he reduced this to the territories of Angevin days , Normandy , Maine , Anjou , Touraine , Aquitaine ( to include Poitou , part of the concession made by the princes at Bourges in 1412 ) , together with the substantial arrears still due for the ransom of John II and , following the now well-established pattern , the hand of a daughter of the French king , this time Catherine , sister to Isabella whom Richard II had married in 1396 , together with a dowry . |
26 | Then he takes all of his things out and himself and he never comes back . |
27 | yes , he does n't want to stay with her , but I 've told Paul that if he goes back to Karen and take some of his things out , then he takes all of his things out and himself and he never comes back |
28 | Then he hailed another for himself and gave the driver the address of the Montrose . |
29 | Mr Li is not an economist , but at least he recognises some of the imperfections of the policy his economists tell him to follow . |
30 | There he photographed most of the famous tourist attractions and bought home around 50 superb colour transparencies . |