Example sentences of "had [verb] him [prep] " in BNC.

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1 There was much he was not aware of in security operations , but the general had placed him in charge of the inquiry .
2 A strange fierce joy had filled him after that , and he had n't really heard anything Ashton or Smith had said to him .
3 He had needed to wind down after the spiralling tensions of the day , and once again he felt the company warmth and support that had sustained him through the day .
4 During the six years that followed his restoration , Louis put together again the coalition of ecclesiastical and secular support that had sustained him in the 820s .
5 After tea , Miandad began settling the score with Salisbury , the young legspinner who had dismissed him at Lord 's .
6 Frank claimed that he had not known that Gobie was running a prostitution service from Frank 's apartment on Capitol Hill and that he had dismissed him upon learning of it .
7 The householder claimed that the burglar had jumped him in the dark and so he had stabbed him .
8 Nicky responded because , probably for the first time in his life , someone had shown trust in him and had treated him with respect .
9 Gandhi was enchanted by the viceroy 's frankness , and recalled to him that Smuts had treated him with similar candour , recognizing , as he said , the justice of his claim on a certain issue , but advancing unanswerable reasons from the point of view of government why it was impossible to meet .
10 Until then they had treated him with a mixture of sympathy as a man caught up , by line of duty , in a political imbroglio , and suspicion at what he might do to make things worse .
11 On the few occasions that he had gone down to The priory with the lad , his parents had treated him as one of the family .
12 Not for the first time , Beth asked herself how she could so readily condemn David for being so weak as to love someone who had treated him in such a callous and despicable manner , when she herself was guilty of the very same weakness !
13 The police had to tow him to a lay-by or something , or to the side cos erm it just cut out and that was it !
14 Did Obispal 's associates realize that the rashly rampaging Inquisitor was only present in this auditorium courtesy of Jaq 's Assassin who had plucked him to safety ?
15 But before they reached the other side , Caesar cried out to Cassius for help , so Cassius had to carry him to safety .
16 Invalided out of the army in 1915 , Colman began to take up the acting career which had fascinated him since amateur dramatics in childhood .
17 Though he now said that he was ‘ no longer very much interested in my own theories about poetic drama , especially those put forward before 1934 ’ , the old interests which had fascinated him from his first dramatic Fragments continued to grip him , leading to the fact that each of his dramas had as its ‘ sort of springboard ’ a ‘ Greek myth ’ .
18 Of relics of ‘ Our Henry 's ’ birth , the chateau of Pau keeps a single , peculiar example : the large turtle-shell supposed to have served him for a cradle , once his grandfather had christened him by rubbing his lips with a clove of garlic and a dab of Jurançon wine .
19 She had taught him with the thrashing that he would be punished if he was caught !
20 Emerson 's essay on ‘ history ’ begins , ‘ There is one mind common to all individual men ’ , whereas Eliot 's anthropological reading had taught him to be wary of the nineteenth-century assumption of what was ‘ in the words of M. Lévy-Bruhl , the uniformity of mind ’ .
21 His background had taught him to be sober , frugal and methodical .
22 And Preston very dubious , because she did n't look like she had a baby in her tummy and experience had taught him to be very sceptical about any information his family gave out , especially on the subject of babies and where they came from .
23 Eleven years on the Ratcliff Highway beat had taught him about Sids .
24 Because I had taught him about it you know , from coming from .
25 But he swore at a spectator who had provoked him during a game against Essex at Ilford and again on Sunday when he was racially abused on returning to the pavilion after scoring a half century which helped Middlesex clinch the Sunday League crown .
26 This , followed by a pint of the Skein of Geese 's execrable ale and an overheard conversation between two gin-guzzling county ladies concerning the merits of shorter hemlines , had plunged him into abject misery .
27 Nature , he thought , had intended him for scholarship yet here he was at forty-six , still a small-town tradesman .
28 He had formulated these principles on several occasions in the past , not least when monks had consulted him about accepting ecclesiastical promotion .
29 The soulless , impersonal State had reared him since then , putting him through higher education and choosing his career for him .
30 It was the first show of emotion she had made and it did more to make Wexford believe her story than all the documentary evidence she had furnished him with .
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