Example sentences of "you [verb] him [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 You met him at the Kremlin .
2 You got him on the C B or something dad says and er he says she wo n't be up cos got ta take her to the doctors or something
3 ‘ How much money have you given him in the last three weeks ? ’
4 You rode him like a real jockey , ’ Nails said .
5 No it 's probably er a reaction like you do if you tickle him in a certain place they go do n't they ?
6 ‘ Do you want him in the clinic , or back to his own place , Shelley ? ’
7 You passed him on the way in . ’
8 ‘ Then will you bury him in the churchyard ? ’ she asked quickly .
9 ‘ I know you and Niall did n't exactly get off to a good start , but if it 's any consolation you caught him at a bad time .
10 It is not necessary for you to meet him at the moment — in fact , he is not here right at this moment — but you may use the telephone .
11 OR there 's Gazza ( Paul Gascoigne ) when you grab him by the testicles and say ‘ Can you speak in a bit lower voice ? ’
12 ‘ I heard about Froggy , ’ he said , ‘ and that you found him with the shaft of a golf club stuck through his gullet , ’ he finished brightly .
13 You see a name come up on the leaderboard , then it might disappear and you think to yourself , ‘ I wonder what happened to him ? ’ , and you forget him after a while .
14 You dropped him for the Prime Minister . ’
15 I ca n't believe you 've persuaded Sharpe to attend , or have you turned him into a dancing man ? ’
16 When he does — if he does — report to DS Fox before you let him into the house , and leave the explanations to Fox . ’
17 ‘ He feels as if you played him for a fool .
18 Will you send him to the gallows ?
19 If you put him on a wyvern there is a temptation to spend half the game flitting about behind the enemy lines or stuck up in the air .
20 Christ God dealt with the problem which spoiled his image in us and he has to do it because of fundamental thing , he 's got ta do it from the centre , you know you can get an apple , an ordinary apple and you can polish it up and you can have it so that it 's bright and glistening and the red is almost you know it , it , it , it almost dazzles you the shining on it , it 's got a real good polish on the skin , but inside , there 's a grub , and all the polishing in the world does n't get rid of the grub , and you see that 's so often what we do , we polish and polish away on the outside , that 's gon na make us better but it 's only skin deep because inside the grub is having a field day , he 's having a party of all party 's , he 's got an whole apple to himself and the grub of sin in your life and in my life is having , has a field day and we polish the outside and we try and make it look good and we be we become presentable and there like the apple on the market stall it looks good , it looks tremendous until you take a bite out of it and you see in the bit that you 've bitten there 's a , there 's a hole going through and you wonder where the grub is , is it in the bit that 's left or in the bit that you 've eaten and this is just like sin you see in our lives and so God in Christ he did n't deal with the outside bit , he did n't bother trying to make our conditions better , he did n't bother trying to work on the outside , that 's the difference between the gospel and social work and there 's nothing wrong with social work , it 's just that it 's going , it 's coming from the wrong end , it starts on the outside , it will educate people if we give them better housing , if we give them better circumstances , if we give them better wages , now all these things are right and that we should have them , but that does n't make any difference , you see , the person is a sinner , all he becomes if you educate him is an educated sinner , if you give him a huge pay rise all he becomes is a rich sinner , if you put him in a palace all he becomes is er a sinner living in a palace , it does n't make any basic difference to the person .
21 Gazzer seemed to be talking to himself , not to Marie but , suddenly , he looked straight into her face and said : ‘ Did you tell him where she lived , like you told him about the money ? ’
22 You kill him with the gun , not the aeroplane .
23 Why do n't you contact him at the address below .
24 ‘ Did you see him outside the hall ? ’
25 ‘ Or do you see him as an inconvenient remnant of outmoded superstition — a bit like a gallstone — of which we must all be purged before religion can take on its true form , that is , without him . ’
26 ‘ Did you see him after the killing ? ’
27 So you drop him at the actual hospital ?
28 You spell him with a capital M , as in Murray ; to me he is very lower case .
29 it 's like sort of a guy comes into lectures and , and , and he can be , particularly when talking about things like racism and disability , be quite liberal as it were , you know , and that kind of when you get him down the pub all on his own er a quite different repertoire comes out so er
30 The sooner you get him to the vet , the better .
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