Example sentences of "let [pers pn] [adv prt] [prep] [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I always reply , ‘ It 's the Sixties for you now , dear , so you get out there and make a wally of yourself ’ — and he has never let me down in that respect , I am glad to say .
2 She hoped she had n't let him down in any way .
3 He heard her sigh deeply , the way she always did when he let her down in some way .
4 He took big lungfuls of air and then let them out in great racking sobs that shook his whole body .
5 Let me in on this mystery that surrounds Corosini .
6 I want to see you again just as soon as they let me out of this hospital .
7 " You will never again leave the house without my permission … and I want to know who let you back in last night . "
8 My start was beginning to let me down around this time — Ron and I were concentrating more on my pick-up — but I had the satisfaction of beating Calvin Smith quite comfortably .
9 There 's no way I intend to let you out of this bed until you 've promised that you 'll marry me . ’
10 ‘ And as I said , there 's no way I 'm going to let you out of this bed until I have your answer in the affirmative . ’
11 Say me a word , one enlightening word , to let him out of this cage .
12 She would not explain herself to Luke Scott , because to do so would mean he mattered to her , and to let him matter in even the smallest way was to make herself vulnerable — to let him in at some level , and she had an intuitive sense of the havoc he could wreak once admitted to the number of those people who mattered in her life in their various ways .
13 The only thing that lets it down in this area is a slightly off-centre truss rod cover .
14 They 'll certainly let you in after this performance , " the Magistrate had said ironically as Mr Bradley made one or two more last-minute arrangements with Saint Peter for the opening of the celestial gates .
15 And then the policeman said : ‘ We 'll let you off on one condition . ’
16 Do n't let her out of this room .
17 He seemed surprised as if it had not occurred to him that literature might let him down in this way .
18 In a wedding photograph , the interesting faces are not those of the bride and groom , but of the encircling guests : the bride 's younger sister ( will it happen to me , the tremendous thing ? ) , the groom 's elder brother ( will she let him down like that bitch did me ? ) , the bride 's mother ( how it takes me back ) , the groom 's father ( if the lad knew what I know now if only I 'd known what I know now ) , the priest ( strange how even the tongue-tied are moved to eloquence by these ancient vows ) , the scowling adolescent ( what do they want to get married for ? ) , and so on .
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