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

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1 Oh as he said something , he loves driving , but he hates driving in London .
2 Green , did n't he want to go for grey ?
3 Did n't he want to go for grey ?
4 Why should he want to die in Palestine — away from his family and people ? ’
5 ( He turns to look at Fateha ) Where do you live , er …
6 In particular , Haslam found the camaraderie he experienced working alongside mineworkers extremely rewarding .
7 ‘ Nice boy , ’ he planned to say to Sheila later , ‘ artistic , too .
8 Once demobbed he planned to go to New Zealand and start a new life .
9 To show the world how many princes felt it worth their while to dance attendance on him , Henry invited them and also the King of Navarre to a court he planned to hold in Limoges at the end of the month .
10 There were other , smaller tasks which he wished to complete : when he had finished the play , he planned to revise for publication the lectures which he had given on education at the University of Chicago .
11 He drew up a very elaborate Writer 's Guide to explain what he had in mind to the authors he planned to canvass for Doctor Who .
12 Nithard pointed out that what Lothar had done to him was just what he planned to do to Charles .
13 The despatches that mapped every move he planned went into Wales ahead of him by this same route .
14 Yet when his campaign train reached McCarthy 's state of Wisconsin , where he planned to speak in defence of his old chief , he thought better of it and let that guy from the gutter stay on the train .
15 He said he planned to fly to Libya with leading Scottish defence QC Lord Macaulay to meet the accused men .
16 He agreed to go to Rome himself to try to obtain an acceptable solution .
17 In fact he returned to Amsterdam , but in 1681 he agreed to serve as leader of the English Sephardi community which had been so generous to him years before .
18 Bus conductor , , tickets please , tick what 's a matter , mate ? well you know and the man threw me off the train and listen , he goes come on gov , give me the letter I 'll read it .
19 He goes to live in London with Herbert Pocket , and is turned into a gentleman , living an expensive but futile sort of existence , and becoming ashamed of Joe and his village origins .
20 The way he goes crunching into tackles makes me so glad I play with him and not against him .
21 All the people he goes to meet for dinner and tea .
22 Down , down he goes heading towards Ilkeston — cows in fields stare and moo approval .
23 ‘ The Mercy Seat is about this person in solitary confinement , becoming more sensitive to inanimate objects , and as he sits thinking about human and Divine Justice , finding himself judging these things as Good or Evil . ’
24 He sits wreathed in smoke , taking my confession like a Catholic priest .
25 Since for most of his reign he avoided going to war , he hardly deserves the reputation for belligerence which contemporaries conferred on him .
26 He expected to act as sponsor to Chou En-lai in the unfamiliar field of international diplomacy , but it was actually Chou who took over centre stage ( as The Times pronounced , 25 April 1955 , ‘ It has been Mr Chou En-lai 's week ’ ) .
27 And then he became irritated by Lineker 's ‘ goody two-shoes ’ image , because he felt it was not necessarily justified .
28 Frederick himself showed this contempt , in writing and conversation , with an often brutal lack of restraint , especially as he became soured by decades of effort and struggle .
29 Baxter 's career at Raith Rovers flourished and it was only a matter of time before he became won of Scotland 's most sought after young stars .
30 However , he became embittered with age , losing his fine looks and noble habits , and becoming a surly , cob-webbed ghost who lived in dark caves .
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