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

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1 In front rode Mr Rochester on his black horse , and with him rode a beautiful lady , her black curls streaming in the wind .
2 Grumpily Dai Huang chose Li Lu , to help him construct a newer , bigger kiln .
3 The land he rode was marshy , forcing him to weave an intricate course past the more treacherous patches .
4 They questioned whether air traffic controllers should have over-ruled Captain Fuchs and insisted on him using a remote runway .
5 All the activity around his earth , and the fact that there were a mere three hounds , had combined to make him think the open country might be safer today ; now they 'd given him proof that it was n't .
6 Until recently , the method by which Hébrard made the casts , enabling him to preserve the original waxes ( most of them owned today by Paul Mellon ) has been shrouded in mystery and the precise number of the edition has remained uncertain .
7 ‘ Shall I tell him to wait a few minutes , Inspector ?
8 Beside him sit the other island dignitaries , the representatives of each of the six communities into which the island is divided .
9 Blocking the BA/USAir deal would have required him to renounce the current aviation treaty between the two countries which would have been ‘ a very dramatic step ’ .
10 Blocking the BA/USAir deal would have required him to renounce the current aviation treaty between the two countries which would have been ‘ a very dramatic step ’ .
11 And so just as Jesus showed his at-one-ment with us , he now asks us to show our at-one-ment with him , and join him to continue the Great Battle until the final defeat of Evil and the ‘ restoration of all things ’ .
12 But that did not prevent him seeing the possible significance of what she had told him .
13 Few of his ministers are saying , even in private , that they expect him to lose the next election .
14 It would have seemed strange to those who had known Nigel in his early days as a conscientious objector to find him cheering the prime minister through the Falklands War .
15 His hair , which he had cut himself in one of the gales of thrift that blew up in him every few weeks , kept getting into his eyes and caused him to see a charming rainbow when he stood under a street lamp to look up at Sam 's room — something he had done too often .
16 An appointment was made for him to see an orthopaedic consultant who had a monthly clinic in Bala .
17 I desperately wanted him to see the right ‘ way to go ’ .
18 Chief Inspector Salter was anxious to see him and she had made an appointment for him to see the Chief Superintendent later that day .
19 His years as a sculptor had taught him to see the human figure in solid , three-dimensional form , and his people now have necks like columns , oval or elongated faces and noses sharply drawn , as if cut into the planes of the face .
20 ‘ I was telling Sir Henry that it was rather late in the year for him to see the true beauty of the moor . ’
21 ‘ There 's another legacy of £1,000 , this time to his friend Martin Burger , ‘ more than enough for that new pair of spectacles which I hope may improve his judgement and help him to see the obvious . ’
22 A tube of Winsor blue for Alan Tate , spectacles for Burger … ‘ which I hope may improve his judgement and help him to see the obvious . ’
23 Walsh added : ‘ I expect James 's ankle to be right but I 'll probably start him from the bench and let him make an explosive entrance .
24 Let him make the first move .
25 A month later a high-ranking army officer had heard him deliver the following verdict on integration : " They are not Provenals or Languedocians .
26 However , maybe Stalinvast still survived , and the Tormentum Malorum might yet leave the warp in time for him to compel the old woman to send a signal to save the situation .
27 Summoned to Lord Beaverbrook 's presence on her departure for the US she listened to him develop a one-sided Scottish conversation which included the listing of many ancestors and their places of burial .
28 It also allowed him to include a wide range of ‘ non-sacred ’ ideas and images which colour our lives from the cradle to the grave , not least those of loving and sexuality .
29 It is in the music of his latter years that one can find him reliving an older manner that evokes the comfortable world which Humperdinck , wisely , never left .
30 Fanatics carry a huge ball and chain , a weapon so large that it would be impossible for a Goblin to pick up in normal circumstances , but the Fanatic 's strength is boosted by fungus beer enabling him to swing the heavy ball round and round .
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