Example sentences of "and he [verb] [adv] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Something occurred to him , and he punched out Terence Rigby 's number once again .
2 He was intensely aware of the importance of these ecclesiastical duties , and he carried out consecrations , and gave advice or judgements on discipline as necessary .
3 He did n't blame her and he had n't time to argue .
4 I 've been up there buying things for him in the past when he was er operating the taxi and he had n't time to go himself .
5 He took me out last Sunday and I said as we were driving over to Lavenham , I said an early would be much appreciated , I said I cooked the Sunday Lunch for my lodgers , but I have n't , in fact , had any myself he said you 've got to have a high tea , he said you must have a proper meal and he ordered up salad and a a ham salad and have this and have that and have the other , where as some of them like this chap Gerald who was erm sent me by one of the other agencies the first time we went out he took me to a meal and he obviously felt that quite enough , after that he used to come out to see me after he 'd had his meal meanness , hanging onto money !
6 He knew Mario was the Number One and he knew why Mario was Number One : it was a matter of business .
7 He knew the name of the Mayor , and he knew why Battersby was not the be.at Grammar School .
8 But at the same time there may be limitations in your own vision and he brought out parts that maybe I would n't even have used .
9 And he goes well James came and said , he goes ah so Jimmy found him and he and James goes ooh no Alistair found me .
10 In his Life of Hooker Walton states that in the original lost manuscripts there was no mention of kings being accountable to the people ; and he relates how Charles I , in a discussion with the Parliamentary leader Lord Saye , refused to accept any arguments based on the last three books , because it was doubtful whether they were authentic , although he gladly accepted Hooker 's judgements in the first five .
11 And he kicked up hell when he was told he had t'retire .
12 It had taken him a long time to adjust himself to this , but now it no longer irritated him , and he felt only pity for his wife .
13 She just frightened him off and he ran away sort of thing ?
14 ‘ You will have it , then , damn you , ’ he growled , and he struck not Poll , but Sally-Anne , hard in the face .
15 And he laughed off suggestions that he might recall Lineker once he starts playing again for Grampus Eight in May .
16 Sharpe suddenly feared the loss of Lucille and he thought how love made a man fearful and vulnerable .
17 In 1914 ill health forced him to leave the railway works , and he took up market gardening .
18 And he said well Wicks ' are cheaper he said we 'll go to Wicks ' then and I 'll measure up for it when I come over .
19 and he said only cost about twenty cost about twenty five quid to get
20 Tom seemed very casual now , as if he had recently found the answer to some burdensome question and could relax at last , and he teased both Belinda and Mrs Porter mercilessly about the Christmas presents they had given and received .
21 Jehan was used to the kind of council at which nearly everything was decided before the participants sat down to talk , and he wondered why Alexei was allowing so much disruption and argument .
22 On the lighter side it reminded him of Stamford and he wondered how Burden had got on .
23 And he picked up Gabriel with just one arm round his hips , and stumped stolidly away with him to the privacy of the inn .
24 and he hangs up nuts , I think he 's got about
25 And he called back Foreign Secretary Douglas Hurd from Italy for an emergency meeting today .
26 The fresh air hit him and he sucked in lungfuls and drank them down .
27 Then he lost out to Roy Scheider for the lead in Bob Fosse 's All That Jazz , and he turned down Arthur which remains Dudley Moore 's most famous film .
28 He enclosed the green that had been open to the villagers for years , and he bought up Hooper 's farm just to tack on his land , this land you 're living on . ’
29 er I think we get a saturation point and the thing that annoys me is that young fellow who came to the club had a got , we got a special went to the special trouble of getting a for him and I can not get it off him and he lives up Newton way somewhere I 've been to him three times
30 Norman Crawford then pulled off a master stroke , introducing McConnell , and he set up Mark Burns for a short corner strike in the 46th minute before adding two goals himself in the space of five minutes to leave Holywood 4–2 ahead .
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