Example sentences of "and he [adv] [vb -s] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 In London , and he regularly gives thanks for his escape , he worked as a film editor after attending the Royal College of Art .
2 ‘ There 's a guy on the phone says that he 's Linford Christie , the European Indoor athletics ’ champion , and he badly needs help . ’
3 So I said , he 's a casual friend of mine , he 's quite old , but he 's a very good painter , and he badly needs money and I should very much like some of his pictures .
4 His machinery works , and he even has government approval — all he needs now is a manufacturer .
5 What he means by structuralism is clearly rooted in structural linguistics and he carefully quotes Troubetzkoy to indicate the programme he will apply to anthropology :
6 Tony is a big fan of mahogany 's sound qualities , and he also uses walnut for backs and sides , and koa wood too .
7 On difficult questions he takes the opinion of counsel , and he also prepares briefs for counsel in legal proceedings in which counsel are employed .
8 Within RBGE , C. Will has previous experience of using GIS software , including GKS , GIMMS , CARTO-NET and ARC-INFO with ORACLE-based interfaces on Vax and InterGraph hardware , and he also has contacts with software developers and hardware users in Edinburgh University Geography Department and British Geological Survey ( including Overseas Geological Surveys ) .
9 At one time he lived in Devon I think and he also has association with Yorkshire , so that is could be quite probably in the countryside but it does n't have to be a forest , does n't have to be a fox out there but he does actually say I imagine this midnight moment 's forest .
10 Nonetheless , Hart is highly critical of Devlin 's identification of society with its shared morality and he further accuses Devlin of conceiving of morality as a ‘ seamless web ’ , so that those who deviate from one part of it are almost bound to deviate from the whole .
11 If I am particularly hard on Chailly here it is because Schoenberg suffers so often from performances of this kind , and he so needs interpreters who understand the spirit behind the notes .
12 ‘ I think what happened to Fishbane was that years ago people told him he was a bit of a dog and he therefore confuses licentiousness with lustiness . ’
13 and then it finished and he always turns video off but he never turns telly off , so I turned the telly off
14 You talk to the man you are buying it from and he really takes trouble over you .
15 All we know of Henry Hanna comes from Leland , and he never mentions Hanna teaching anywhere or acquiring any eminence , and there is no medieval evidence for his school .
16 ‘ I have no note of it — and he never gives interviews , ’ her lunchtime companion stated categorically .
17 It is plain that food was a permanent interest , and he faithfully records details of dinners , with comments on the madeira in the common-room cellar .
18 The author showed shrewd perception of the powers which could be exercised by commercial blockade or by boycott , and he specifically indicates wool and tin as English products which were necessary to the Flemings , who could be brought under pressure by a withdrawal of supplies .
19 The summary follows its original uniformly , section by section , except in the following ways : ( i ) Nietzsche frequently alludes , without explaining the allusions , to more or less well-known features of Greek tragedy or the Greek world ; he gives virtually no dates for artists , thinkers , or events , ancient or modern ; and he sometimes makes points that rest , clearly enough , on unstated presuppositions , but points that can not readily be summarized without reconstructing each presupposition and making it fully explicit .
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