Example sentences of "he [vb -s] [prep] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 He plays for Rovers now .
2 He plays at pirates all the time , does wheelies on his bike , throws mud at his friends , kicks his football into the neighbours ' garden and pings his food around at the tea table . ’
3 The English-style play of the Swiss under Roy Hodgson does n't affect the style of the left-sided Chapuisat , who forms a dangerous partnership with Adrian Knup , another Bundesliga star — he plays with champions Stuttgart .
4 You 're telling me you 're playing la , he told me he plays in ladies teams , I bet you all had great fun , watching them women bending over table .
5 To be sure , God 's Spirit is at work in the East and everywhere , but that is different from saying that he contributes to beliefs which deny the truth that he has inspired .
6 He points to savings on rates — which can obviously be substantial in London — if one of the premises is kept empty , and other immediate gains from the cutting of staff in areas of duplication such as administration , accounts , quality control and training .
7 Already across a wide range of different activities he points to advances in the process of ‘ breaking up , dissolving and methodologically as well as critically reconceiving the unitary field ruled hitherto by Orientalism , historicism , and what could be called essentialist universalism ’ .
8 He flies at heights of 6000 ft above ground level and loves every minute of it .
9 Terry B says he had some treatment and lots of help from friends … he goes to meetings every week and he 's enjoying life and taking one day at a time … he 's had one innings and is now enjoying his second
10 The patient may feel embarrassed at first when he goes to places he does not know , but he will be made welcome if the restaurateur knows what to expect .
11 It seems he goes to pieces in a crisis , then .
12 He goes to pieces , he 's lost all confidence ai n't he , in himself
13 He goes for walks with the boys and they talk about fishing and tractors . ’
14 erm , because she 's , she 's quite big for her age , but like Louise she 's quite tall now , she 's nearly too tall for him even though there 's nothing of her she must only be about seven stone , erm , but this little Vicky she 's oh thinking she 's really good now and she 's improved so much and getting confident as well , and the dad takes in , he puts the bridle on him , he takes the dog in one hand and Min in the other he goes for walks for miles with the , with the horse and the dog Dave does
15 He goes on binges .
16 The Minister has told us today that he does not want to let us know what his proposals will be when he goes into negotiations .
17 He sleeps under hedges , in disused warehouses .
18 He refers to errors in the generous benefactor to the Club , later becoming President .
19 He refers to errors in the Golf Illustrated article written in connection with the Opening in May 1908 .
20 He refers to symbols as pointing beyond themselves to the Ultimate while at the same time partaking of the nature of that to which they point .
21 He refers to customs in his school days such as the keeping of the Day of the Festival of Bridget , when they took to school a few silver coins as an offering to the teacher , and the boy and girl who took most were called the King and the Queen of the school for a year .
22 He refers to customs in his school days such as the keeping of the Day of the Festival of Bridget , when they took to school a few silver coins as an offering to the teacher , and the boy and girl who took most were called the King and the Queen of the school for a year .
23 If I can please er I think our comments on that er perhaps Mr Ray is being er using the grob global flays when he refers to employees .
24 David Rosser of Ammanford , Dyfed , carries a small water pistol that he squirts into dogs ' eyes , and also confesses to bombarding them with small pebbles .
25 He thinks about girls he might meet , and the evolution of the brassière .
26 All four books reveal a steady concern with imitation and interpretation , and to read them together is to be clearer about what it is that the writer intends us to think that he thinks about things .
27 He thinks about things , Masklin does .
28 Freud 's view here is Comtean ; he thinks in terms of three stages for the progress of civilization , beginning with the animistic phase , to which modern obsessional or paranoid neurotics regress , going through an intermediate phase of religion , which is different from the first because people give the powers and omnipotence to gods , and not to themselves as they do in the magical phase of animism .
29 Th th that the quarry man somehow has has an investment in the erm in the rock in th other than than than what he receives in wages .
30 In simple terms , the surgeon supervises and controls the robot from a computer terminal , using information that he receives from sensors at the tool-end of the robot , known as the end-effector .
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