Example sentences of "in many [noun pl] he " in BNC.

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1 In many cases he will try to over-compensate by rushing around doing things for others as if to prove to himself that he is needed .
2 He is likely to be very bright and to find learning easy but in many cases he will be coached and encouraged by a parent ( usually the father ) in that one direction so that he becomes a prodigy or a ‘ genius ’ at mathematics .
3 Also , a reporter can only extract a tiny part from any whole event , and in many cases he extracts what will be eye-catching and provocative .
4 In many cases he was even able at the first consultation to diagnose the probable organism which the patient was harbouring on the basis of the patient 's temperament , and was able to confirm these later by bacteriological studies .
5 In many cases he had left the unions to the last minute and missed the relevant conferences anyway .
6 Hence it was that in many subjects he was behind the knowledge of the day .
7 In many ways he is only partly successful .
8 Connolly 's observation is often taken to confirm him as a better judge of literature than of politics , but in many ways he was remarkably prescient : Home was indeed ‘ honourably ineligible ’ for the new age which was dawning in the Tory party .
9 In many ways he was an unassuming man , and always likeable .
10 He is also the favourite and in many ways he has more charisma .
11 In many ways he understood the Burman , and his relationship with the pre-war leader of the Executive Council , U Saw , was a close one .
12 In many ways he had a great influence on me .
13 In many ways he 's got a thankless task — he and his colleagues have to build partnerships between bodies and individuals who often hold totally opposite views on how Scotland 's countryside should be protected .
14 In many ways he is very like Slim , a man respected and admired by all throughout the book .
15 In many respects he was the archetype of the ‘ patriots ’ and ‘ public men ’ who played a crucial political role as spokesmen for their localities and ‘ the country ’ in the years preceding the civil war .
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