Example sentences of "his [noun] [verb] him [art] " in BNC.

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1 His university refused him a not lofty post in the faculty of divinity .
2 His enemies call him an ‘ ambulance chaser ’ .
3 His arrogance made him virile and masculine , his stubbornness gave him the character to administer his centuries-old responsibilities .
4 Eleven years later the World Federation of the Deaf at the seventh Congress in Washington awarded him an International Solidarity Merit Award , and Gallaudet College , taking advantage of his presence made him the first recipient of a medallion for " outstanding international service to the deaf " , which he received at a special convention attended by the Vice-President of the United States .
5 His mum spoilt him a lot , he was the youngest , and was used to having everything done for him .
6 Paul Jordan from Kidlington in Oxfordshire was suffering the first pains of a heart attack , when his GP told him the agony was caused by a bad bed .
7 As the warrior Solor he possessed neither the exotic glamour of Ruzimatov nor the romantic height of Cope — and a dispassionate viewer would admit that his turban gave him an unfortunately gnome-like appearance .
8 Instead of wrestling with the imponderables of land and trees and drainage and crops , he was back where his skills gave him a harsh certainty .
9 His goalkeeping won him the man of the match award .
10 We can assume that his scepticism extended to his belief in the efficacy of non-violence because he notes that reading Tolstoy influenced him greatly and cured him of his scepticism making him a believer again in ahi sā .
11 A demand from his bladder gave him a happy idea .
12 In return his subjects owed him the duty of honouring that peace .
13 ‘ Bearing in mind that it will be Ian McGeechan 's last game as Scotland coach , it 's a perfect setting for Gavin and his side to give him a fitting send-off , ’ said Best , who will be taking a video of the Murrayfield game back with him and will spend this week poring over it , looking at both the performances of Scotland and potential Lions .
14 Charlie 's hearing was fully restored a week later and a smile appeared on his lips for the first time when he saw Grace standing by his side pouring him a cup of tea .
15 Finally he 'll decide to go and tinker with his terminal to tell him the tally to date .
16 His sole gave him a peculiar sensation , realising that it was undone and dragging , made him laugh , in retort , but secretly , inside .
17 When his ears tell him the truth , he will not listen .
18 And Joanne 's seeing through his disguise made him a bit wary .
19 When he came to Arsenal , James told Chapman in no uncertain terms that he did n't like his plan to make him a scheming inside-forward .
20 On his first night back , his parents give him a party , to which they invite their circle of middle-class , middle-aged friends .
21 Mungo noticed that his window gave him a view of the field and the edge of the forest .
22 He accepted that his return made him a target for the IRA .
23 His homosexuality made him an outcast , he had no job to do , very little money to live on , and ended his days in an alcoholic haze clinging desperately to his Old Etonian tie as the last link with his sordid past .
24 Ironically , Johnson 's lawless image endeared as much as it repelled. he was obviously a player who was easily unhinged but in the odd chemistry of Scotland 's footballing psyche , his recklessness made him a dangerous but likeable rogue .
25 One wonderful story is that he decided against a career in mathematics when his teacher gave him a poor mark in an exam for answering a problem correctly but not using the method taught in class .
26 If a left-wing politician is genuinely anathematised it is not possible for his opponent to pay him a higher compliment .
27 Unlike the passages on Seyh Abdulkerim , Molla Abdulkerim or Molla Yegan , however , about all of whom Mustakimzade has some sort of reservation , this passage on Hizir Bey contains no reference to or any derivation of it ; and it would seem from his particular vagueness in relation to Hizir Bey and his failure to accord him a separate article that while he is aware of the claim that Hizir Bey became Mufti , he is unsure of his relationship to the main stream of Muftis and probably regards him as not having been part of it .
28 His record makes him an outstanding candidate for an R Y A Award .
29 Finally , to avoid a scene , his wife granted him an audience and Alice returned to her room upstairs to allow them some privacy .
30 His wife darted him an impatient look .
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