Example sentences of "[Wh det] he [vb -s] [adv prt] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 Althusser elaborates his thesis that Marxism is not a historicism at some length , presenting a critique of the historicist and humanist traditions which he takes back from Sartre to the beginning of the century , even to the Russian Revolution itself , and in which he also includes the ‘ absolute historicism ’ of Gramsci and the Frankfurt School .
2 For example a salesman may operate with his own briefcase computer unit which he plugs in to the telephone system when he wants to obtain or transfer information .
3 These voices were all inside him , waiting to be freed , and the significant point is the formal pattern which he creates out of these disparate personalities .
4 But it does mean that the job is immensely diverse , with a lot of administration and only a small element of number crunching , which he seeks out as an extra because he likes doing it .
5 The answer is one of two things — a Labour government which he can not influence for the good , or a Labour government which he turns out in a few months , provoking another election .
6 In Berkeley 's view , the mistaken doctrine of abstraction is also involved in the distinction between primary and secondary qualities , a distinction which he rejects along with the materialism it involves .
7 His love for Edmund is a trust that the bastard exploits , planting a false letter , which he backs up with false testimony , alleging that Edgar would wish to oust his father , a hypocrite 's typical inversion of the truth .
8 He even , when accompanying , transposes a prima vista ; and everywhere Italian or French works are put before him , which he plays off at sight .
9 Police believe it 's only a matter of time before the robber uses the knife which he keeps out of sight while demanding money .
10 Super Mario exists on a sole diet of mushrooms , which he gobbles up during the game , but Mario 's favourite food is pasta .
11 From a pocket in the case , he removes a copy of a painting of Jesus , which he holds up for me to see , widening his eyes like he used to when challenging an opponent or the press .
12 But more affecting still is the first half of the record , in which he looks back with a wry , but far from dry , eye on his own childhood .
13 The fable sends the learned educationist home to divide Fred 's knowledge into parcels which he hands out to various expert textbook writers .
14 Nevertheless Todorov 's study is interesting for the principle which guides his whole enterprise , and which he sums up in his conclusion .
15 This is obviously related to Foucault 's analysis of the genealogy of the disciplinary society , a society of surveillance and control , which he sets out in his book Discipline and Punish , and to his argument that power proceeds not in the traditional model of sovereignty ( that is negatively , ‘ thou shalt not ’ ) but through administering and fostering life ( that is positively , ‘ you must ’ ) .
16 ‘ Michelet has strong emotions , and he smears what he feels on to paper without caring in the least how he does it , and without giving the slightest thought to technique or conventional forms — just shaping it into any form that can be understood by those who want to understand it . ’
17 Thus Barth continues to read what he does out of Genesis , setting aside all else that he must know , for the text alone counts .
18 ‘ He 's just a healthy young lad , I do n't know what he gets up to in his sex life , ’ he told the leering press .
19 Not for what he gets out of you .
20 God does not love you for what he gets out of you .
21 If a professional binder is employed , make very sure that he is what he sets out to be and has all the qualities of sensitive craftsmanship the work demands .
22 See what he comes up with .
23 Well see what he comes up with .
24 See what he comes up with , yeah .
25 See what he comes up with .
26 And see what he comes back with .
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