Example sentences of "he [verb] [pers pn] to [art] " in BNC.

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1 With blood pouring from the bare bone he made it to a pub near Loose , Kent , where regulars called 999 .
2 Berger said : ‘ He made it to the first corner ahead of me and I tried to hang on .
3 Neville 's determination paid off : he made it to the top , raising £55,000 on the way .
4 His ‘ act as if you own the place ’ approach seemed to work , and he made it to the double doors that opened into the main tunnel complex , not even pausing as he attached a circuit board to a second brick and casually tossed it into the heart of the pile of drums on the dock nearby .
5 Juliet stood staring at him as he made it to the kitchen chair .
6 She knew how Sisyphus must have felt , rolling that stone wearily up the hill , only to see it slide back down again as he made it to the top .
7 He made it to the Temple of Bel-Shamharoth . ’
8 In competition with 800 other boys , he made it to the last five , but nerves got the better of him during a final audition at the Criterion Theatre , in London 's West End .
9 When the crackle of the flames , the creak of the floorboard , and the weight of their bodies returned , he lowered her to the carpet before the fire and sat himself beside her , leaning so that his face was only inches above hers .
10 With a groan he lowered her to the quilt and brought his head down .
11 Then he lowered her to the ground and shifted over her , and for a second it was like it had been before and fear touched her , but then his lips came down and brushed her mouth , and she was lost .
12 Angry Brian Reatus , 44 , allegedly foamed at the mouth as he pinned him to the wall .
13 Mr Woodcock , 47 , of Holgate , York , grabbed the weapon with one hand and it went off , blasting a wall with pellets , but he hung on , dragging the raider into the car park outside the restaurant , where he pinned him to the ground until armed police arrived .
14 For a long time he held the photograph , fingering it gently , careful not to mark it , and then he pinned it to the cork-board on the wall .
15 have to tell Bob whatever he might like to talk about that he turns it to the Poll Tax , the fact of the matter is that the Poll Tax is nothing to do with Oxfordshire County Council .
16 Three days after receiving the inspectors report , he passed it to the Serious Fraud Office for further investigation .
17 He re-directed it to the sales department and made a mental note to have a word with the post room ; it was about time that they got their act together .
18 By default he alerts us to the fact that it was the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries that saw individualist arguments gravitate to the political right and become , however marginally at first , a vocabulary and strategy available to the Conservative party .
19 An owner now obtained ( in theory at least ) the same price for his land irrespective of whether he sold it to a private individual or to a public authority .
20 He sold it to an American bookseller , who broke up the historic volumes that had survived the hazards of more than six centuries .
21 After this but before the rogue was traced , the rogue took the car along to a market in Warren Street ( where dealers commonly sold cars ) and he sold it to an innocent purchaser .
22 The star lot , Holbein 's Lady with a Squirrel , was withdrawn two weeks ago by Lord Cholmondeley , when he sold it to the National Gallery for £10 million .
23 It had made the Marchese a small fortune when he sold it to the deputy of the English connoisseur in Naples who was going to ship it away in boxes ; it was being stripped from the walls when the Government heard of it and came and sealed up the villa again , but not before one of the intermediaries had sliced enough off the top of the deal to pay his passage to America , promising to send after him for his family .
24 Mr Gordon was the owner of the Dunkeld business before he sold it to the Tulloch Group in 1988 .
25 The regular vet — a friend of mine — has gone to live in Australia and he recommended me to the zoo as his replacement .
26 It was hanging on the wall , and when he applied it to the p'tar 's rump the beast screamed once , as if outraged , and then it trotted sedately out of the stall and allowed itself to be backed between the shafts of the cart .
27 Zeno ran a coin across his knuckles , this way and that , a tiny acrobat , then flipped it ; as it fell he clapped it to the back of his hand .
28 He led her to a chair .
29 He led her to a door ; the door opened out onto the street .
30 He led her to a waiting taxi and , as he held the door for her , for a brief instant their eyes met .
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