Example sentences of "[vb -s] he [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 But his victory at Stoke on Saturday has him back at the top of the list .
2 ‘ He seems to hold David Howell , who 's still owed three weeks ' money , particularly responsible and wants him out of the club .
3 He left a Will which places him firmly in the central Anglican tradition :
4 The lady accompanies him back to the Alps , to wait and worry as he and his partner , Hansi Kirchner , set off up the virgin North Face of Versücherin .
5 Nicky Henderson 's Wont Be Gone Long ( 2.20 ) has top weight but is not badly treated considering he beat Lockwood Prince by 15 lengths at Chepstow last May and meets him here on the same terms .
6 Nicky Henderson 's Wont Be Gone Long ( 2.20 ) has top weight but is not badly treated considering he beat Lockwood Prince by 15 lengths at Chepstow last May and meets him here on the same terms .
7 It rules him out of the game for the rest of the season .
8 Though there appears to be no evidence to support Husameddin " s assertion that Molla Fenari actually went in company with Karamanoglu Mehmed Bey , the fact that the former dedicated his commentary on the to the latter and praises him fulsomely in the preface suggests a close connection between the two and is a further indication that it was during Karamanoglu Mehmed Bey 's rule ( 1402–19 , 1421–3 ) that Molla Fenari 's sojourn in Karaman occurred .
9 There is nothing which cuts him off from the early sociologists in his basic assumptions about the importance of instincts and their interaction with men 's cultures .
10 One Saturday evening she takes Howard by the arm and leads him away from the crowd round the pool and the bar , out of everyone 's earshot .
11 It gets him out of the house , away from her — oh ! ’
12 ‘ His business takes him all over the world . ’
13 Flashback F M rewinds to December nineteen eighty three , from three meet former radio four Today presenter John Timpson with another of his wacky books which takes him all over the country looking at the unusual including some of the things you never knew existed in North Yorkshire .
14 They believe that it is possible for man , and that it is indeed his highest intellectual and emotional task , to survey his own being , to call into the forefront of his mind every attitude and habit of mind , of emotion , of passion and feeling , to penetrate down beneath these superficial layers , to deeper and deeper and ever more tranquil , untroubled generalized forms of the self , until eventually you come within sight of some inner absolutely undisturbed pool which every person has within himself , and which if he finds it removes him finally from the distracting passions of ordinary life , and with this rider , that in proportion as you get there and find this thing , this true self within yourself , you find that it is n't just something subjective and peculiar to you , it is something identical with the world , so that in solving your own problems in one sense , you do it by transcending your ordinary nature .
15 Chance also throws him together with the itinerant bible-selling woman who was outraged by the hooligans of ‘ our town ’ and whom Stepan now , just once , calls his ‘ saviour ’ ( spasitelnitsa ) .
16 In The Quarry Man ( 1908 ) a workman is blinded during blasting operations at a quarry ; later his wife becomes unfaithful and he is driven to suicide ; just in time his wife pulls him out of the river and she now abandons ‘ the downward path ’ .
17 conducts him downward into the dark ,
18 Mark … the jockey that rode him to victory at Cheltenham has retired from the saddle but still rides him out on the gallops and is now helping to tarin him
19 It shuts him up for the time being , and I 'm not going to give him the satisfaction of thinking his insolence cuts any ice with me .
20 A Polish farmer fits him out with a complete set of dry clothes and sends him on to the West German embassy in Warsaw .
21 Iain pushes him off and lays him flat on the bed .
22 The exigent journalist Lynn Barber , in her collection of interviews Mostly Men , singles him out as the sole male representative of a type she describes as ‘ nice , straightforward , feet on the ground ’ .
23 Prue steers him discreetly towards the house .
24 Does my hon. Friend accept that with falling net incomes , particularly in the hills , and diminishing employment prospects , everyone on the Conservative Benches wishes him well for the negotiations in Europe ?
25 So we share his horror as he observes in himself , experiences almost passively — as if it were happening to someone else — the emergence of the tempting desire to murder Duncan ( ‘ suggestion ’ still had the sense of diabolic temptation ) : There , with amazing speed , and as if parenthetically ( ‘ whose murder yet ’ ) we become privy to the secret that sets him apart from the others on stage , the goal to which all his energies will ultimately be directed .
26 This sets him apart from the ordinary and gives him a reason for living .
27 Afterwards a rickshaw driver hauls him off to the City of Joy , a vast area of slums where the matronly Joan Bethel ( Pauline Collins ) runs a school .
28 He signed a new 12-month contract yesterday and coach Phil Larder puts him straight into the side for the Greenalls Lancashire Cup first round home tie with Carlisle .
29 More sink puts him well below the intended glide path , but instead of making the decision to choose a field and look around near it for more lift , he glides on .
30 ‘ Early on in that , the hero 's homeless and somebody puts him up for the night . ’
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