Example sentences of "take [noun sg] [prep] him [prep] " in BNC.

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1 He does n't take rivalry with him off the competitive track , and at that time I considered him to be the Master with myself as the apprentice .
2 Let Liberals and Conservatives take office under him without prejudice to their party allegiance- but let the leaders stand out , keeping their party machinery intact , and promise support say for a year only .
3 I can detect nothing in the evidence , even on the debtor 's version , to suggest that Marshalls misled or took advantage of him in any way .
4 She was introduced to the novelist Mr Henry James , and took tea with him at his home , Lamb House , in Rye , and he thought that she was all the beautiful American girls he had written about rolled into one !
5 An odd kind of feeling took hold of him at the thought he had a daughter .
6 That was why Aunt Alicia took pity on him in the first place , Jenny had said , because he had nowhere to put his horses .
7 Cynewulf , remembered for his campaigns against the Britons ( ASC A , s.a. 755 ) , was probably a force to be reckoned with , and it is conceivable that Ecgberht , son of Ealhmund , took refuge with him in 785 .
8 The magazine had first taken note of him in his Student whizz-kid incarnation , when Branson had appeared in a BBC documentary entitled Men of the Future .
9 If any Boozebuster victim decided he did n't actually want to go back to the office or home to his wife , Eddie would gently , but very publicly , take hold of him by what she called his ‘ wedding tackle ’ and lead him out of the pub .
10 The hon. Gentleman is absolutely right to say that the schemes have been highly successful , but I take issue with him on his assertion that the matter should be taken out of the hands of the district council and placed in the hands of the Scottish Office .
11 His last visit was to fulfil an invitation from Marco Corner to take supper with him at his house .
12 D' you know , in a way I feel as though I have to take care of him for her . ’
13 ‘ Allocate a man to take care of him for the next few days until his tutor , T'ai Cho , joins him . ’
14 The idea , however , that the rebels aimed to kill the King is unlikely — not only did the rebels show a positive loyalty to him at Mile End and Smithfield , and adopt as a watchword ‘ King Richard and the True Commons ’ , but they made no attempt to take vengeance on him for the death of Wat Tyler , when he could have been at their mercy .
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