Example sentences of "we [vb base] he [verb] [art] " in BNC.

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1 We trust him to do the mileage he says he does .
2 A police spokesman said : ‘ If Mr Hutchinson succeeds in recovering his pet , we suggest he follows the advice of the old Rolf Harris song and ties his wallaby down , sport . ’
3 We do n't believe he was infectious before May 21 and we expect him to make a complete recovery .
4 We suspect he found the girl 's body on the Wednesday afternoon but we ca n't get him to admit it . ’
5 He is the first reigning Formula One world champion to make the switch and Haas , a wealthy ex-racer , admitted : ‘ We know he had a fabulous offer from Ferrari .
6 We know he had a family — six of them have already been mentioned — but not whether they went on holiday nor where ; although here we may make an important cultural assumption : if we assume it as a norm that families go on holiday , a fact of life as inevitable as having a father , we might divide it into Given New The family spent holidays in a lakeside hunting lodge in Michigan , near Indian settlements .
7 Yeah well we know , we know he had a producer .
8 We know he took a flight to Brussels with that girl , Paula Grey . ’
9 We know he ran a long way .
10 William and I decided to write to Prince Charles because we know he loves the countryside .
11 The Admiral , whose office dates from the end of the thirteenth century , has at first no jurisdiction apart from the discipline of the fleet , but in the course of the fourteenth century we find him assuming a jurisdiction to punish crimes , such as piracy , committed at sea , as well as a civil jurisdiction over shipping and commercial matters .
12 Lean times were to follow and three years later we find him using the backs of sheets of his Jedburgh map to draw a privately commissioned plan .
13 Though we find him joining the cut and thrust of conference debate , or delivering polemical lectures , we also glimpse a man apart , and in an intellect of such stature , it is tempting to describe him as aloof .
14 Once again , the reader is very impressed by Dickens ' use of the language and we find he has a subtle comic gift which enables him to add witty scenes to this serious novel .
15 It 's a big step up for him , but we believe he has the talent , courage and temperament to develop into a top-class player . ’
16 ‘ He is ideal because he is both a statesman and an artist [ he used to write rather stodgy plays ] , and we believe he shares the values we stand for , ’ says an ICA spokesman .
17 We ask him to draw a train standing before a signal .
18 After two days , no worries Campbell lifts his part , and in every scene we rehearse he develops an added point of reference , of texture , a moment of silence , self-doubt , humour , or an elegant short cut from one emotion to another , and this bewildered ( but not passive ) young Englishman springs into life .
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