Example sentences of "[pron] [modal v] [verb] himself [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Another who may find himself in the same situation will call upon all his inner resources in his efforts to deal with the problem .
2 In his commentary on Psalm 136:7 he observed that the Holy Spirit ‘ had no intention to teach astronomy ’ but had used popular language ‘ that none might shelter himself under the pretext of obscurity . ’
3 But it would be desperately hard , in the Arab world , to stand up to a man who could portray himself as a ( literally ) world-defying champion of Palestinian rights .
4 Now , with Benjamin James Titford , the eldest son of Benjamin the Silversmith and Elizabeth , we encounter a craftsman 's son who would establish himself as a member of the professional classes — by becoming a schoolmaster .
5 That means you fly to Leningrad and stick around for orders from someone who will introduce himself with the words , ‘ The face of the city has changed . ’
6 There are other pains still to come , for none can hide himself in a secret place where the deeds he has done will not search him out .
7 It is only in the pursuit of important goals that he may see himself in a negative light , and only during the recurrence of situations similar to the childhood loss that brought the negative schema into existence .
8 Such behaviour did not recommended itself to another , more discreet , influence on Leonard during those undergraduate years : Professor F.R. Scott , later Dean of the Faculty of Law , presently , while Leonard swithered and swayed as to whether he should commit himself to the arts or commerce , his lecturer in law .
9 He should think himself into the position of the other person , whether in-house or customer , and try to anticipate his approach and reactions .
10 He should throw himself at the Doctor 's back , grapple with him , break the machinery at which he was working .
11 He should confine himself to the questions put to him .
12 It seemed inevitable after this that he should take himself to the nearest fish and chip shop to eat his supper .
13 For an instant , Jimmy wondered whether he should hurl himself at the plate-glass windows .
14 Perhaps he should refresh himself with the facts .
15 His Prince Hal is never a roaring boy : he sits hunched or sprawled , with dark unwinking eyes : he hopes to be amused by his bully companions , but the eyes constantly muse beyond them into the time when he must steady himself for the crown .
16 He acknowledges that before a contemplative is ready , like Moses , to climb the mountain , he must prepare himself by the time-honoured Western disciplines of Lectio , Meditatio and Oratio — study of scripture , meditation and prayer — but he tells his readers that other authors will tell them all they need to know about these .
17 He must free himself from the control of any established church and its priests and instead subordinate them to the State .
18 First , however , he must prove himself in the hardest job of his life .
19 He 'll find himself on a brain-shrinker 's couch or in the bin if he does n't get a hold of himself . "
20 He plans to stay in Sheffield to compete on the first day of the UK Championships today then concentrate on training , his Olympic place assured without having to jump in the trials in Birmingham on June 27–28 , in which he 'll confine himself to an outing in the 100 metres .
21 Kemalpasazade sought the advice of Mueyyedzade who counselled him to feign acceptance of Hacihasanzade 's proposal ; and when , on the next day , the latter petitioned the sultan , Bayezid II , to appoint Kemalpasazade to a kadilik , Mueyyedzade intervened , speaking highly of Kemalpasazade 's abilities and asking that he not be wasted in a kadilik but rather that he be given the vacant Taslik medrese so that he might busy himself with the pursuit of learning .
22 In doing so he might find himself in the company of evolutionary epistemologists such as Riedl ( 1979 ) , whose over-arching theory of life as an ‘ erkenntnisgewinnender prozess ’ seems to require a unitary notion of knowledge or information , information that can be stored in a genome at one end of the evolutionary spectrum , as well as be expressed , at the other end , by scientific theories that make the world a less strange place to live in .
23 He might lose himself in the books sometimes , but he might find the Key there , too .
24 If he could adopt that standpoint , he might describe himself as an empirical realist but a transcendental idealist ; but , since he can not adopt that standpoint , he is just a ‘ realist ’ .
25 He could picture himself at the court of King Louis , accepting the thanks of his grateful monarch .
26 He had mistakenly believed that total retirement from first-class cricket was necessary before he could avail himself of the pension fund for West Indies Test cricketers .
27 Frankie wriggled free so that he could remove himself from the confrontation .
28 He could see himself in the garden with Fraulein Simonis , investigating those dark eyes at closer quarters .
29 Once in he could lose himself among the excited household , and never be in one place long enough to be an object of suspicion , until he could find a means of encountering Ralf Isambard alone .
30 Sir Robert Carey , Warden of the English Middle March , had been in London visiting the queen , but had prudently arranged for relays of horses to be ready for him between the capital and Edinburgh , so that he could ingratiate himself with the King of Scots by being the first to arrive with the news that he was now King of England also .
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