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

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1 She went to the door and he recited the words until she had gone out and shut the door behind her .
2 So anyway she had the er settee and brought a friend with her with a well I think it was one of these Range Rovers that you can seat erm , you know , about seven and he dropped the seats down and got the settee in , I do n't know how he managed it .
3 ‘ Seven years ago I was like him , but then Jesus , ’ and his voice rose and wavered , and his eyes lifted to the sky , ‘ yes , Jesus , he came to me and he planted the seeds of truth in me- ’
4 It was hard to see and he touched the stones as he walked along by the wall .
5 He admitted that Riddle had made a will three or four years back , and he thinks the provisions of that will stand , but he would n't tell me what they were .
6 And he had the makings of a strong , but kind and loving father , who would always have the little girl 's best interests at heart .
7 ‘ I thought Stuart Barlow 's pace could make the difference and he had the chances .
8 And he had the walls of the city prepared , and stored it well with food and with all things needful for war , and gathered together a great power of Christians and of the Moors of his seignory .
9 And he had the workmen back .
10 His shirt was n't clean and he had the beginnings of a pimple at the corner of his mouth and another about to burst above the knot of his cravat .
11 He was there looking for a place for her — ‘ and he had the children with him ’ .
12 Went home to Wales and he had the police uniform on .
13 The lure had been too compelling for Heather to resist and he had the photographs to prove it .
14 The trial judge held that although the delay was not unjustified , on the balance of probabilities , it might be prejudicial to the police officer , and he ordered the proceedings to be stayed .
15 I done it to I done it to Russell one night messing around and he told the girls in work I 'd been away for the weekend and he 'd had somebody else there honest to God he did !
16 He told people of a bag he 'd lent to her and which was found with her body ; He said his fingerprints would be all over his wife 's cars steering wheel ; and he told the police she 's been violent and upset when he left him .
17 He loved Encyclopaedias ; especially the ones with the old pictures in , and he knew the names of every single one in the library .
18 Walton J. held that the payments were voluntary and therefore irrecoverable and he rejected the submissions of the plaintiffs that they were paid ( 1 ) in discharge of an illegal demand colore officii , or ( 2 ) in any event under duress .
19 And he rejected the demands of environmentalists and opposition parties for measures to discourage car use in favour of public transport .
20 He met C.L.R. James with his individual brand of Marxism and pan-Africanism ( James had broken with the Comintern ) , and he studied the writings of Marcus Garvey which ‘ did more than any other to fire my enthusiasm ’ .
21 Previously they 'd always been er very staunch liberal , well know intellectuals , Sir James , and he represented the teachers .
22 These idealizations are referred to by Holdaway as the ‘ mental map ’ of the police ( 1983 : 63–4 ) , and he addressed the typifications Hilton 's police had of their area ( sites of ‘ danger ’ and ‘ trouble ’ , ‘ mump holes ’ , and so on ) , and the people they encountered ( ‘ challengers ’ , ‘ disarmers ’ , ‘ prisoners ’ ) .
23 After he had taken them , it occurred to him that the aspirin was possibly a stimulant , not a sedative , and he read the details on the bottle morosely for ten or fifteen minutes , thinking now and then of emetics and vomitoriums and wondering how the Romans did it .
24 A notice hung on the gate and he read the words in the beam of the headlamps : DANGER .
25 I showed him our itinerary and he read the names aloud slowly and haltingly as if thee were the names of some distant land whose pronunciation he was unsure of .
26 And he got the hots for a girl as well which did n't help .
27 He moved slowly up by the side of the bed , and now he said , ‘ Are … are you all right ? ’ and he saw the bedclothes that she was holding under her chin rise and fall with the movement of her neck before she said , ‘ Yes .
28 Gregory regarded these claims as being marks of particular wickedness , and he saw the Merovingians as being , for the most part , rapacious .
29 Stephen had another couple of miles to walk before the view was open to him again and he saw the men in the distance , deployed out across the ground on the river 's right bank .
30 His hands moved lower across the smoothness of her belly to her hips and he explored the marvels of her body .
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