Example sentences of "he [vb -s] [adv] [vb infin] [det] " in BNC.

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1 He does also score some important goals .
2 Qaddafi speaks of a larger effective grouping , the nation ( he does not give much space to the solidarity of the world ) .
3 Even so , he does not give any pointers to the Club 's originators .
4 The presence of my hon. Friend the Minister of State shows that he does not miss any opportunity to listen to his colleagues .
5 In this respect Locke is not an empiricist : he does not think that geometrical knowledge or , for that matter , the knowledge we would have in natural philosophy if we knew the real essences of substances , is empty and trivial .
6 He has done well for himself Elsie and it seems he does not drink any more .
7 But he does not represent any value , and his well handicapped stable companion DEEP SENSATION is a sensible alternative at 11–2 with Ladbrokes .
8 Despite the charges against him , he does not anticipate many defections .
9 Characteristically , he does not cite any source for this assertion .
10 Professor Graeme Davies , its chief executive , says that he does not want any unions in his building .
11 He does not want any of that .
12 The run-on line also conveys the immortal life of Tithonus which he does not want any more .
13 The region 's problems are mainly political , in his view , and he does not want more strains on the Community budget .
14 His term ends on December 31st and he does not want another one .
15 ‘ Oh , he does not do that , ’ said Sally-Anne cheerfully ; all her normal brio had returned , and she was not going to allow Dr Neil to put her down , and when he came back she gave him her most dazzling smile , and prepared to do battle with him , whenever battle was necessary .
16 He does not do that now .
17 But he does not do that ; instead , he supports the Government 's curtailment of that right .
18 He does not do this by behaving as if it were his personal project , but by quietly ensuring that things get done as decided .
19 He does not do this by behaving as if it were his personal project , but by quietly ensuring that things get done as decided .
20 Unlike Mr Melding , he does not regard this campaign as a stepping stone on the route to Westminster , but sees it as an extension of his involvement in local politics .
21 It would also allow Mr Lamont to show he does not contemplate any deliberate devaluation of sterling .
22 In the bathroom the nurse helps the patient to undress , taking care that he does not make any effort which increases his spasticity .
23 He mentions Home Office research suggesting that crime is not as bad as everyone thinks , but he does not mention any of the other analyses and carefully toes the party line .
24 He does not mention this book , but he does quote Lewis to the effect that ‘ nearly all our older poetry was written and read by men to whom the distinction between poetry and rhetoric , in its modern form , would have been meaningless . ’
25 I think there must be a period for a start when the office or elsewhere is a bit on the nervous and inefficient side as smokers are deprived , but he does not mention this .
26 However , he does not justify this suggestion by giving the criteria for classifying a mode of expression as a rhetorical device .
27 The irregularity of Cnut 's relationship with Harold 's mother possibly influenced some : the Encomiast claims that Archbishop Æthelnoth refused to crown him , although he does not connect this with Harold 's birth .
28 Gandhi 's tolerant attitude to religions , which will be dealt with in the following chapter , is an indication that he does not consider any religion to have a monopoly of Truth and that includes Hinduism .
29 But his speculation — so far only seen in outline , in a methodological ( and often polemical ) essay rather than in a series of detailed studies — point to what I believe to be the correct questions even if he does not provide all the right answers .
30 The argument is difficult to uphold in some respects since Furth 's argument seems to be that deprivation of experience is at fault , but he does not provide any suggestions for an approach to maximising deaf people 's performance .
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