Example sentences of "he [verb] it a [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Although mainly a director of low budget productions , he told me that before the war he concerned it a poor year if he did not earn six thousand pounds , quite a sum for those days .
2 I rarely comment on Irish affairs , not because of lack of interest but because the Irish communities would reject any opinion or suggestion if they considered it a ’ Brit ’ suggestion or opinion , but , in this instance , the circumstances are so hideously distressing that I feel compelled to comment and to ask the Minister whether he thinks it a heavy irony that last Friday 's incident followed successive discoveries of large caches of arms and whether perhaps it was a desperate attempt by the IRA to reassert some degree of authority .
3 As he walked downstairs , he read it a third time to make sure .
4 He found it an impossible spectacle to watch , and walked up and down the corridor for nearly two hours .
5 But hard as John Meaney tried he found it an uphill struggle against Hughes , who was firing on all cylinders , and his great ‘ cool ’ blessed with a wide repertoire of shots saw him a worthy winner 4–0 from seven frames .
6 When the Chilaw kachcheri queried a sale voucher counterfoil submitted by a headman , it was explained that the seller had branded the animal with his grandfather 's name , Nicholas , because he believed it a lucky name in cattle breeding .
7 He give it a full swing of the bat .
8 He graded it an unlikely E7 6c — unlikely in that it is , in all probability , much harder .
9 Du Camp in one of his books — I forget which , there were always so many — made a reference to the malign effect on man of too much solitude , he called it a false counsellor who nurses at her breasts the twin infants of Egotism and Vanity .
10 He called it a disgraceful situation for a man in a position of trust .
11 He took it a few feet out , so now he was on the edge of the 18 yard box … near the corner ( so approx 25 yards from goal ) , he pulled it back the other way , turned and curled the ball into the top left corner with his left foot .
12 But he thought it a reasonable request to ask for a route and he took himself away to Tara 's great map room to procure maps for them .
13 The main point is this : Flaubert thought democracy merely a stage in the history of government , and he thought it a typical vanity on our part to assume that it represented the finest , proudest way for men to rule one another .
14 He thought it a great feat that she had got in from the Point in an hour and a quarter .
15 He thought it a fine idea , and presently excused himself — returning with a bottle of Mrs Westaway 's cowslip wine , in which to drink to the new venture .
16 First , he thought it an unspoken part of the 1931 bargain that MacDonald should not be discarded as soon as the immediate crisis was over .
17 Even as Felix drifted into sleep he thought it an evil omen .
18 He felt it a boring thing he had to do as he would probably rather do something else but nevertheless it had to be done , not to save his reputation but restore his self-respect which he felt he did not have fully if someone was allowed to insult him and get away with it .
19 He felt it a necessary part of his vocation .
20 He bought it a few days ago .
21 When he did it a second time , I put the light out .
22 He groped his way back towards her , and Cassie laughed again as she watched his stumbling progress around the bottom of the bed he gave it a wide berth , so perhaps the nineteen forties bed , which must occupy the same position as her own , was longer or wider than hers .
23 One of them , Stuart Surridge , did not live to see the production , which is dedicated to him ; but he gave it a memorable quote when he reflected on his Surrey players of the 1950s , with whom he won five consecutive County Championships : they were a great side , he recalled : ‘ All they wanted was a kick up the arse ! ’
24 Then , in September 1989 , in The Independent , he gave it a different slant : ‘ The idea of Active Citizenship , ’ he wrote , ‘ is a necessary complement to that of the enterprise culture .
25 He gave it a few pumps and collected an armful of logs for the stove before going in through the back door .
26 He gave it a few more seconds to get him through the next traffic signals and then killed it again .
27 He gave it a few more minutes .
28 When the group began , Gedge was not particularly interest in lyric-writing , and like singing , he considered it a necessary evil .
29 He closed it a few months after Maxwell 's paper folded — with a circulation of only about 100,000 .
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