Example sentences of "he [verb] [prep] [pers pn] [adj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Well he whispered to me last night , you know , then of course Laura told me everything cos she was there
2 He passed beside them all , seeing no one , his eyes fixed on the sea and the skiff , and the two great ships and the galleys beyond , all of them flying the Lusignan flag .
3 He agreed with it all , of course , to ingratiate himself , looking deep into her large , green eyes all the while .
4 Desperately he clung to it unable to bear even the thought of the nothingness again , and felt Fox 's fury lash against him .
5 Nigel was sufficiently worried about my feeble attempts towards the top of the ascent that he got below me each time I had to turn and pushed me forward into the slope .
6 The policeman knows OK and tells me , but he looks at me funny all the time .
7 I ask Mr Jackson if I can take all my plants , and he looks at them doubtful like .
8 In 1798 he exhibited No. 447 , ‘ Derwent Water from Castle Rigg ’ , and in 1801 , No. 649 , ‘ View from Kirby Lonsdale Churchyard Westmorland ’ , but this appears to be the last entry , probably because once he had moved to Ambleside he concentrated on his one man shows in the area .
9 By s.25 : [ a ] person shall be guilty of an offence if , when not at his place of abode , he has with him any article for use in the course of or in connection with any burglary , theft or cheat .
10 The first job of the officer is to ‘ determine whether he has before him sufficient evidence to charge that person with the offence for which he was arrested ’ .
11 No but wants to know if you get to keep all the tapes cos he want to them all .
12 ‘ Did he discuss with you any of the changes it would entail ? ’
13 The sun exploded into whiteness and the muddy grass turned to sand so fine that he sank in it ankle-deep as he ran .
14 He proposed to me that afternoon , ’ put in Angelina apologetically .
15 He mentioned to me several cases that were outstanding and told me that he and other contractors are stopping doing work involving a Housing Executive grant because they have to wait anything up to three months to wait for payment after the work has been done .
16 he used an illustration of the pig , you know you can polish the pig up , you can clean it , you can scrub it , you can oh de cologne it , you can do all sorts of things with it , you can tie a nice pink ribbon around it and you can put it in a palace , but it 's still a pig and it lives like a pig and you can cl and no matter how clean you 've made it , it 'll soon find some dirt to wallow in and the ribbon might make it look nice in the show ground but it does n't make any difference to its nature and so it is with us and so Jesus did n't start on the outside , but he starts at the inside he deals with the route of the problem , in One Corinthians chapter fifteen and in verse three it says for I deliver to you as a first importance , this is the basic thing , he says to them this was the first thing that I said to you because it was the most important that Christ died for our sins , according to the scripture , what ever else Christ gives to us , what ever else he does for us , what ever else the gospel produces , the basic , the most important , the fundamental thing is that Christ died for our sins .
17 Also I know that my coach at North Harbour , Peter Thorburn , was very impressed with Ian when he played for us last summer .
18 If in order to get to the root of it Eliot consulted a Viennese expert , the result was not evidently a cure , because I believe he suffered from it all his life : but the consultation , if that was what it was , may have benefited him by disclosure — ‘ the luxury of an intimate disclosure to a stranger ’ .
19 Anyway when the time came to , to , to stop off for short time everybody had had their turn except the union president and myself and he came to me this foreman and he said er , now John I do n't want you to think what happened between me and you will make any difference about being sent back for .
20 But he erm he was once burned very severely with one of them blowing out , and he 's b he suffered from it all his life after that .
21 Why was he looking at her that way ?
22 He seemed to me huge and shaggy , with his breath hanging about his face in the chilly air .
23 In his youth he seemed to he involved with many sports and I have seen evidence of his playing goalkeeper for a select Scottish hockey team — on roller-skates .
24 With a savage cry he drove into her one last time and felt the shockwaves pulse through him , draining all sensation and leaving a blessed numbness in which there was no more pain …
25 He nodded to them all , and swept from the room .
26 Laying his cloak on the ground , he threw on it gold rings and pearls and precious stones .
27 It is clear from this that for Rolle prayer was the most important exercise by which the reality of faith is realised , which is why he deals with it first after the section on the necessity for patience in adversity : Prayer is the means by which the transforming dynamic of the love of God is accessed in the innermost marrow ( " inhirliest mergh " ) of our hearts ( 7.118.28 ) and labour becomes light ( 11.123.30 ) .
28 He responds to us all in different ways , to his sister , Amanda , he 's always smiled at her and we say that he looks at her at her in his cute way . ’
29 The day after that , Tobie was commanded to the Palace and returning , seized Loppe by the arm and marched him into the workroom John le Grant had devised for himself , where he scowled at them both .
30 He glanced at them both .
  Next page