Example sentences of "[coord] he [verb] [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 As each succeeds she or he passes the cup to the next person until everyone has had their turn .
2 The doctor responsible for the treatment must make a written report to the supervisor if he is unwilling to continue with the treatment or he forms the view that : ( i ) it should continue beyond the period specified in the order ; ( ii ) the child needs different treatment ; ( iii ) he is not susceptible to treatment ; or ( iv ) he does not require further treatment .
3 Thus the judge 's exercise of the discretion entrusted to him stands unless he exercised his discretion on some erroneous principle or he misunderstood the evidence or he was plainly wrong .
4 The worker is defined as a free agent since she or he has the freedom to choose his or her employer .
5 Either he wanted to suffer , or he liked the idea of being treated less fussily than in the more expensive wards .
6 The sight of the boat grounded on a mud bank and him holding a rope , looking for a tow , is followed by a ‘ Man Wanted ’ notice going up back at base .
7 And he hates the fact that people think that , too .
8 When we all left , and he locked the door behind us , the murderer committed his crime . ’
9 His design theory was based on the belief that natural forms should be abstracted and made geometric for use in ornamentation , and he likened the designer 's mind to ‘ the vital force of the plant ever developing itself into forms of beauty ’ .
10 Well Camels was the lower no the bot the one of the bottom of the station was Bert and he married a Stronsay woman .
11 Then , when the family heard of it , they packed him off to Ireland , arranged fur the marriage to be annulled , and he married the Connor girl . ’
12 It was long since Adam had thought of him so , and he gathered the warmth of their recollection to him as gratefully as if he had salved one bleached and solitary bone of the beloved right hand out of the Severn , and laid it back in holy ground .
13 Oldfield and he wins the corner off Brian Laws .
14 And he realized the boy 's terror : he could feel the imprint of the boy 's feelings as strongly as if they were his own .
15 You know his father had started the company and the men , the older men in the quarry had been there from day one with him , you know from when they were producing next to nothing to being quite a profitable concern , and he realized the value of these men , and that you could n't just say , oh because they disagree with you just well , down the road pal .
16 Then , when Albert Dawes moved to Luton Town , Jack became our leading goalscorer and he topped the Palace 's scoring charts in 1936–37 and 1937–38 ; almost certainly , his most satisfying strike for us was the goal he scored in Palace 's 3–1 win at Shepherds Bush against his old club on May Day 1937 in the last match of that season .
17 He had entered into negotiations with the commissioners of His Majesty 's Victualling Office for the erection of an engine to drive a corn mill , and manufacture of the parts was well advanced , when for some reason they turned to John Smeaton [ q.v. ] for an opinion , and he recommended a pumping engine and water-wheel .
18 This gentleman was told of the deplorable state of the lady and the even worse state of her husband , and he recommended the couple to Samuel Young .
19 These were recorded on charts and he recommended the appointment of speed and feed men who would ensure that the optimum rates were adhered to .
20 To Charles he was an indispensable source of wisdom and experience and he relished the time spent in his company .
21 During the war he moved children to his home in Surrey , where a wing was converted into a nursery , and he engaged a cook and nurse and a maid to look after them .
22 From his vantage point he sees in one part of the field the enemy trying to retreat with their artillery and he sends a message to his brigade of light Cavalry .
23 This is painted just before the war , and it 's interesting to compare it with a painting by the court painter , William Dobson who worked in Oxford during the war , his studio was just around the corner in the High Street , because that 's Rupert very much at the end when things were going badly wrong for him , erm and it 's unfinished , perhaps because Dobson was beginning to run out of paint , and the experts at allow , and I think just that face tells the whole story about tension and unhappiness , Dobson 's an interesting painter , one of the first English painters who sort of get to the top in this way , and he painted a lot of the cavaliers at Charles ' court , erm this is Sir John Byron who clattered down the main street at St Aldate 's , before the king even arrived before the Battle of Edgehill , the one that caused trouble for John Smith , erm and he was very much a swash-buckling character , but he did n't spend a lot of time in Oxford later , but he was there enough to have his portrait painted .
24 She went to the door and he recited the words until she had gone out and shut the door behind her .
25 There are n states of nature and he receives a return of if he takes action i and the state is j .
26 Claims that the English tests had not been properly prepared were dismissed as being ‘ without any validity at all , ’ and he stressed the importance of the tests in identifying pupils with reading difficulties at an early age so they could be given extra help .
27 Moments later it opened and he unfastened the chain securing the two doors together and eased one of them open wide enough for him to slip inside .
28 He was wearing close-fitting jeans , and a loose crimson silk shirt , open at the neck , and he carried a guitar .
29 And he carried a gun .
30 General Wade built forty bridges up here inside a decade : and he carried the metaphor of his construction over into his administration — ; under his command , military rule in the wake of an insurrection proved less brutal , more instinctively communal , than the savagery of the butcher Cumberland who followed him .
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