Example sentences of "he [vb -s] [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Leeds have agreed to pay Wigan £5,000 for every five first-team games he plays up to a maximum of £25,000 .
2 He does , he likes to get in the bedroom and , and he fiddles on with the erm
3 He skips over for the bloody
4 Suddenly he drifts off into a momentary reverie , gradually descending back to earth .
5 He drifts back towards the floor .
6 In fact , he turns up at the Harlem Hospital , a few blocks north , two days later , and is heckled as he walks along the wards .
7 He has received a card with drawings of gangsters on it and threats of a ‘ warm welcome ’ if he turns up for the second-round tie .
8 The major question thus always remains unanswered in the Critique : every time that Sartre announces that he is about to proceed with the fundamental problem of how History can be a totalization without a totalizer , he turns back to a previous , more easily intelligible stage on the way .
9 He turns back to the patient , his expression gentle again — there is no trace of a professional ‘ caring ’ in his words or the jarring chord of insincere concern in his voice .
10 Every Sunday he turns out at a hall on a council scheme in Edinburgh to play 5-a-side football with his friends , trying by his own admission to re-live some of the opportunities he missed when he left Carrick Vale Secondary School at 15 to pursue a professional football career in London .
11 The answer is one of two things — a Labour government which he can not influence for the good , or a Labour government which he turns out in a few months , provoking another election .
12 This , he points out in a letter of December 1814 , was ‘ a passionate expression uttered incautiously ’ .
13 He points out in the British Journal of Educational Psychology that the results of these schemes have been disappointing and it is doubtful whether they have any permanent effect on intelligence .
14 In the next step of the argument , he then said , well , religion is a transference , and therefore a form of infantilism , so now he seems to be criticizing religion , but if he 's criti criticizing religion by saying it 's an illusion , surely he 's jeopardizing civilization , because the danger , as he points out in the book , if you take religion away from people , you say , look , this is just an illusion , God does n't exist .
15 THIS is intense ! ’ mutters Emilio Estevez , as he flies about in a glowing car .
16 I have tried taking the castle out , but this only makes him unhappy , so he goes over to the heater and swims underneath it .
17 He goes over to the bedside table and pours a glass of water .
18 As he goes on to the next , I glance at his fingers .
19 I 've been reading Richard Hoggart 's The Uses of Literacy on this journey ; he goes on about the working class not being able to think " abstractly , generally , metaphysically or politically .
20 Beckett remarks in Our Exagmination Round his Factification for Incamination of Work in progress , that Joyce 's work is ‘ not about something : it is that something itself ( Beckett 1929 and 1972 : 14 ) , and he goes on in the central part of his oeuvre , the trilogy Molloy , Malone Dies , The Unnamable ( 1950 — 2 ) , to create a kind of autonomy of his own — — as the Unnamable remarks , ‘ it all boils down to a question of words … all words , there 's nothing else ’ ( 1959 and 1979 : 308 ) .
21 Where we might have expected him to grant her the respect of verse , he goes on in the same business-like prose : ‘ How now , Kate ?
22 He goes up through the hoops along the narrow , she said the first day when all the others were standing there shaking at the narrow bath he was just over it and down and she said you 've never seen him
23 He goes up to a kiosk in Wenceslas Square and asks for a copy of Rude Pravo ( Red Truth ) , the Party newspaper .
24 He watches his expression carefully as he goes up to a beggar and puts a coin in his tin .
25 He goes up to the , he goes up to the bartender , he says excuse me , why is there a bear sitting over there ?
26 He goes up to the , he goes up to the bartender , he says excuse me , why is there a bear sitting over there ?
27 He 's , he 's , he 's jump , he , he , he goes up like a jump jet he goes
28 ‘ The relief ! ’ cries Howard , as he goes about in an old pair of jeans , mending the roof and painting the window-frames .
29 He works in the hospitals , he goes down to the projects in the Bronx .
30 Howard ca n't help laughing to himself as he goes down in the lift .
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