Example sentences of "he [verb] [adv] the [adj] " in BNC.

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1 He stopped short of understanding Christianity because when he thought about that , he laid aside the receptive imagination with which he allowed himself to appreciate myth and became rigidly narrow and empiricist .
2 He attacked both the British and the Russians for their " imperialist " policies in Iran and called for a free , independent Iran with a constitutional monarchy .
3 He does n't like going to school for a start , but he goes else the old man beats him up .
4 By the time he reached the White House , he shared fully the deep contempt for Congress that his hero Woodrow Wilson had repeatedly displayed .
5 He became arguably the first industrial designer , working in ceramic , glass , metal , furniture , wallpapers , and textiles .
6 He became only the seventh Briton of all time to wear the champion 's laurels and will go down in history alongside Mike Hawthorn , Graham Hill , Jim Clark , John Surtees , Jackie Stewart and James Hunt .
7 He became only the seventh Briton of all time to wear the champion 's laurels and will go down in history alongside the other greats .
8 He became only the seventh Briton of all time to wear the champion 's laurels and will go down in history alongside Mike Hawthorn , Graham Hill , Jim Clark , John Surtees , Jackie Stewart and James Hunt .
9 He became only the seventh Briton of all time to wear the champion 's laurels and will go down in history alongside Mike Hawthorn , Graham Hill , Jim Clark , John Surtees , Jackie Stewart and James Hunt .
10 He became only the seventh Briton to wear the champion 's laurels .
11 First and last he sought only the strictest fidelity to justice , rectitude and truth .
12 With an angry , violent gesture he flung aside the broken piece of door .
13 Guiltily he wiped away the girlish tear-stains with the back of his hand .
14 But he envied more the great herring gulls and black-headed gulls which he watched through the bars of his cage as they soared on the summery winds , the white and grey of their feathers caught brightly by the sun as they banked into a turn .
15 ‘ No , he looks exactly the same .
16 Since Eliot 's family was of West Country provenance , he retained all the more interest in that region and in minority cultures , as I have mentioned .
17 Of its contents he retained only the haziest notion ; and he explained that he would have been reluctant to contribute to such a volume — his Second Thoughts on Humanism , published a year earlier , had consisted of a devastating criticism of the editor — save that it represented a tribute to Irving Babbitt , whom he had always revered as one of his masters and about whom he felt that his early criticism had been misunderstood , not least by Babbitt himself .
18 He found instead the only possible protuberance to which they could safely have anchored their rope .
19 He moved aside the folded tephillim and uncovered five neatly-bound books .
20 He has just the one daughter and that girl has given him great cause for concern .
21 Whatever the reason he has neither the spiritual character nor the material resources to redeem Ruth .
22 Rollnik , for example , finds that he has roughly the same number of really bright students in a year now as in 1960 .
23 In 1717 he was appointed with Abraham Stanyan [ q.v. ] joint mediator at the Austro-Turkish peace congress at Passarowitz , a task he discharged ably the following year and for which he was well rewarded .
24 Working with creatures of such speed it was important that he used exactly the right type of camera .
25 Tolkien said that he ‘ disliked ’ Shakespeare ‘ cordially ’ , but he used exactly the same phrase of allegory too , where it concealed an opinion of some subtlety .
26 This is precisely what he had been attempting in " The Dry Salvages " , for example , and it is significant that he used much the same phrase in his demand that contemporary poetry should have such a strong relationship to current speech that " the listener or reader can say " that is how I should talk if I could talk poetry " .
27 If he behaved normally the other boys stepped back and did not respond .
28 So I shouted to Paul to come and have a look at it and he says well the cheeky bugger .
29 Because that , he did mention that he says so the next thing is the home 'll have to go .
30 He received also the grand cross of the Legion of Honour and a honorary DCL from Oxford .
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