Example sentences of "him [adv] [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 We remember him most as the best diver ever to grace the Gorbals swimming pond .
2 Apparently this did not produce the desired reaction from Stanley , so Wyatt went on 17th December to see Scott who , with a disarming naïveté , immediately agreed to a proposal from Wyatt that he should take him on as an equal partner and relinquish half the work to him .
3 If he had hoped that a row might spur him on to a direct , hands on approach to murdering Elinor , Henry was disappointed .
4 He was approached by the Huddersfield directors early in 1921 and the offer spurred him on to a determined effort to prove his innocence in the Leeds City affair .
5 In this case , you should put him on to the defensive by maintaining a series of very strong attacks delivered from the correct distance .
6 ADRIAN MAGUIRE moved upsides reigning champion Peter Scudamore at the head of the jockeys ' table when a double aboard Calapaez and Mr Felix moved him on to the 32 winner mark at Plumpton yesterday .
7 ‘ I just needed to see you ! ’ she said with a brittle smile , walking past him on to the hot beach , feeling the tears burn her eyes .
8 It seemed like a minor miracle when she found herself seated within touching distance of the small group of musicians , until she realised that Rune was well-known here , not only by the management but , as the current number drew to a triumphant close , to the players as well , as they drew him on to the low rostrum and surrounded him with much back-slapping and laughter .
9 The president had silenced the vociferous strike-leader by bringing him on to the ruling body .
10 If there was no work there , the tramping artisan was fed , given a bed for the night and a few pence to see him on to the next town on the official tramping route .
11 I remember on one occasion the four of us went down to Glastonbury Fair where he sang , but due to a balls-up over the sound and the electricity , they did n't put him on until the next day and that was at about 5.00 in the morning when the sun came through .
12 Swing , he screamed at himself as his arms crashed into the pine , not holding , but the weight of his body already carrying him on in the next arc of his trajectory .
13 Studying him now , dispassionately , without the emotional blindness of the aftermath of her accident , or the initial shock of finding that he was last night 's rescuer , it was like seeing him properly for the first time …
14 Unlike the previous soft glow , this new light had a sharpness about it , and it beckoned him upward like the guiding beam of a lighthouse in a dark stormy sea .
15 She had put him right in no uncertain terms , after a hearty struggle .
16 I sent him right in the opposite direction .
17 Chance also throws him together with the itinerant bible-selling woman who was outraged by the hooligans of ‘ our town ’ and whom Stepan now , just once , calls his ‘ saviour ’ ( spasitelnitsa ) .
18 He caught a glimpse of the fair hair and saw that she was talking to someone he recognised as the drummer from the band ; the whole group was there , giving an impromptu concert on tin whistles to the tired hikers sleeping on their rucksacks undaunted by the howl and shriek of the space-invader machines on the other side , a cacophony of mechanical rage that deafened him together with the thin notes of a rebel song .
19 At the last he was in front , but he was dead tired and Winter could do nothing to hold him together for the final desperate few yards to the line .
20 Three months in America in 1914 , raising funds for St Enda 's and mixing with hard-line Irish-Americans , set him single-mindedly on a revolutionary course .
21 But had n't he thought that Spiderglass would save him somehow , plug him in to the endless dance of electrons ?
22 Vologsky punched out a sequence on the computer panel , which automatically locked him in to the local frequency .
23 Tying meant fastening him in with a feeding tray .
24 They 'd piled him in with the dead , and it was only later a naval ensign noticed him twitching .
25 Yes , well Tony Primmer 's one of the riders from Eastbourne that we managed to pick up because we can get him in on a low point average .
26 ‘ I need to see Mr Patterson , ’ I said as if I was letting him in on a big secret .
27 He referred to the policy of separate development as ‘ apart-hate ’ in his first few letters , until somebody must have clued him in on the correct spelling .
28 We try and slip him in on the sly when we think we 've got them hooked .
29 Jack filled him in on the scanty information they had already obtained .
30 And Steve obediently went off , taking with him a jar of Marmite in a garden trowel as a substitute for coal in a shovel , and he stood out there on the front porch in the cold listening to the silence and looking at the stars , waiting for them to let him in on the last stroke of Big Ben on the radio : a faint , feeble echo of some once meaningful ritual , though what it had meant or now could mean nobody there knew or had ever known .
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