Example sentences of "[vb infin] [prep] he in the " in BNC.

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1 He often went out alone , Italian style , and Jeanne would wait for him in the street after the cafés closed .
2 Never mind , I 'll wait for him in the car . ’
3 Now er on the air at five o'clock mister Tim with drive at five and the early evening sequence , and we 're gon na chat to him in the next thirty minutes because he 's been out shopping today and he 's spent quite a lot of money on some brand new clothes .
4 Alan Middleton has recently moved to Aberdeen with Christian Literature Crusade , pray that he would settle into his new role in that place and that Alan would be open to what God would do through him in the coming months .
5 It was unlooked-for grace that after supper he should send his page to ask Mistress Hussey to be kind enough to come and speak with him in the small chamber the prince was using as a study .
6 Yet when it came to negotiation , who would speak to him in the name of France ?
7 If the immigration authorities concluded that Mr Hussain 's assertion that he was undecided as to his long term intentions was pretended rather than genuine , clearly that would weigh against him in the primary purpose issue .
8 She said : ‘ I do work with him in the commercial world — but I have no involvement in his politics . ’
9 But in 1348 the Earl of Arundel , who was Warenne 's sister 's husband and sole legitimate heir , petitioned the king to revoke this agreement , for it would ‘ disinherit the petitioner of his right to premises which should descend to him in the event of the death of the earl … without lawful heir .
10 Lawrence watched Todorov in training and declared : ‘ We 'll look at him in the reserves against Derby and take it from there . ’
11 She could n't look at him in the face .
12 Tony was supposed to have been singing in a Black Sabbath ‘ reunion ’ in the States , which did n't happen for him in the end , but that gave us some breathing space .
13 She said that because he was a volunteer she felt she could not call on him in the same way as with a paid worker .
14 A Mrs J. Minton , who taught conventional art , claimed that owing to the similarity of their names in the London telephone directory she was plagued at least three times a day with telephone calls for John Minton , whose art she did not like , and that open cheques would arrive for him in the post , commissioning pictures and with the note ‘ fill in your own price ’ .
15 His illness would stand to him in the other place too .
16 A woman had sold her home and handed over to her son the £4000 proceeds , on condition that she could live with him in the house he bought with the money .
17 He picked up the wafer of liquid crystal which represented himself and stared at the High Priest 's face , his own , wishing that his own image could confide in him in the same way that the Harlequin had .
18 More and more she was acting like a bitch ; more than once she had to restrain the urge to hit out at him , punch him in his good-looking , smarmy face , especially when she would come upon him in the drawing-room sitting holding her great-gran 's hand , stroking it gently as if it were a cat , and that old woman sitting there and , like a cat , lapping it up .
19 Yet when you bumped into that same person , they would always talk about him in the most loving way . ’
20 She would listen to him in the way that no adult woman ever would .
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