Example sentences of "he [verb] her [adv] [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Much more to the point , why had n't he said he knew Charlotte Hanover when she 'd asked him to accompany her here this evening ?
2 She saw him admire her alluringly seductive feminine body ; his eyes roaming over her delectable breasts and silken white belly to the ravishing curves of her rounded thighs .
3 Lord , he made her so off-balance , like no one else she had ever met .
4 He made her as comfortable as possible on the back seat of the car and drove off into the night .
5 Would he think her very rude and stand-offish now ?
6 He led her up another tortuous steel staircase , its steps worn and buckled , across improvised bridges and rickety gangways , up higher and higher , until they were crouching next to the very source of the molten metal .
7 She 'd been convinced he respected her so much that he had intentions of a more permanent nature .
8 He had never met anyone quite like Fenella and he found her rather intriguing .
9 He found her highly amusing .
10 It was all very well , but she still did n't really understand why he found her so funny .
11 He grasped her suddenly nerveless fingers in his hand , sending her a smile with enough voltage to make her weak at the knees .
12 He visited her there one evening , Bishop Jon and Eochaid in tow , and the three men talked without ceasing , before food and through food and after it , Bishop Jon making notes in his own hand on a slate with a stylus that squealed .
13 So he told her how marvellous it was , and how misunderstood this wretched Frenchman was , and she bought it .
14 He told her how much he had missed her while he was away skiing and then asked her simply to marry him .
15 Then he bundled her now rosy body into her dry shirt and sat her down on the sleeping-bag to vigorously rub her hair dry .
16 And thinking that if he pleased her as much as he hoped , she might be persuaded to part with the Fabergé desk set .
17 Now , when he allowed her so much of his time , she realised that what she had felt before was but a poor shade of the real thing .
18 He hated her so much that he refused even to see her as a person .
19 He followed her down one quiet suburban street after another till they approached the busy main road .
20 He owed her that much .
21 He had looked into her eyes too often , told her that he loved her too many times for her ever to believe him again .
22 He loved her too much even to be able to imagine such a thing ; Pavel 's was the love of Judas , a devotion so great that it encompassed even betrayal .
23 With a husky laugh , he pulled her gently round to face him , and gave her a long , thorough appraisal , from the top of her head to the tip of her toes .
24 Perhaps if he saw her looking wonderful , dancing beautifully , he would realize that he needed her as much as she needed him .
25 ‘ Moll , you 're a good un , ’ he said , as he watched her well rounded posterior moving under the thin nightgown .
26 No man will publicly humiliate a woman because she is ‘ old ’ or he finds her sexually unattractive : no woman will deride a man for his sexual insufficiency or because he is ‘ weak ’ or ‘ wet ’ or a ‘ wimp ’ .
27 He hit her violently several times , on both sides of the head , and she fell into a chair , trembling .
28 He took her by back streets to Golden Lane , where he handed her over to Noakes , the mortuary attendant .
29 His glance raked her from head to foot before he even moved further and she could see that he thought her very decadent to be in her housecoat at this time in the morning .
30 ‘ Maybe , ’ he agreed , helping himself to coffee , the look he sent her slightly wary .
  Next page