Example sentences of "[det] [verb] he [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 She watched as Luke fought his own anger and then half threw him to the ground .
2 He had held a greater ambition for some years , however , and this dominated him until the summer of 1952 — he wished to be President of the United States .
3 Two trucks overtaking one another brushed him to the side .
4 She caught hold of him by the hand and half ran , half pulled him across the room to the door .
5 It gave him four and a half years of power without full responsibility — although he no doubt did not consider that this placed him in the harlot class .
6 He grabbed hold of Steve by the scruff of the neck , half lifted , half dragged him to the front door .
7 Hari half lifted half pushed him through the window and then she waited breathlessly for any sounds that would indicate that Will had been discovered , but when there was nothing , she moved to the door and to her relief , she saw it swing open .
8 This pushed him into the path of an oncoming vehicle driven by the second defendant .
9 For another , it was the opportunity to take proper revenge for the discomfort that Private Eye had caused him over the years , a revenge more satisfying than that afforded him by the Music Box April Fool 's joke .
10 Cos that allows him to the cost ?
11 On occasions a fortunate , or bemused , beneficiary received no less than three charters each confirming him in the legitimate enjoyment of the same right .
12 The wide formal boulevards of Algiers , the plane-trees with their trunks painted white , the tall graceful white-painted houses with their balconies and shutters , the shade of the square reserved for Europeans : all these reminded him of the France he had loved so much as a child ; the towns of the South — Arles or Nîmes or Avignon , some of the small towns of the Loire .
13 In the General Prologue the Reeve is thus described : and : and the Host responds to the serious reflections of the Reeve 's Prologue accordingly : But the Host too has appropriated a character , as judge and ruler of the tale-telling game , that takes him beyond the predictable attributes of his normal station in life : while in the fiction of the Tales , the Miller has just been attributed with the strengths of the court poet Chaucer as a narrator .
14 The latter provided him with the income needed to purchase a house beside the bowling green at Whitehall , and York also secured his election as MP for New Romney in 1661 .
15 The obituaries published in Britain , on the Continent and in America all acknowledged him as the originator of military precision dancing and reported how he had dominated a whole era of show business .
16 Many know him as the British jazz singer , but he is equally respected for his brilliance as a film and tv critic , modern art expert , writer and fisherman .
17 It all swung him towards the burning reality of Kee .
18 Thank you friends , we all know him as the one million pound councillor .
19 The link between his emerging depression and his violent behaviour , the latter defending him from the former , made sense to him .
20 That formed him in the womb ;
21 That put him on the 142 mark alongside Sam Torrance ( 72 ) , with McAllister just behind .
22 Then Brandt went into a tea shop , in spite of feeling that his new landlady 's fried bread for breakfast was going to be more than enough to see him through the day .
23 The conclusion that there was not going to be any hit him at the same time as Rincewind , whirring wildly down the passage , kicked him sharply in the groin .
24 Girardelli 's 60 points for third was enough to move him beyond the reach of Aamodt , no matter what happens in Sunday 's season-ending slalom .
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