Example sentences of "[vb base] [vb infin] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 So whatever noises he and his friends make do n't disturb his colleagues , and the ferocious snoring of the Commander does n't penetrate the love-nest . ’
2 The mixture will leave young cricket-lovers wondering whether they want to ascend to the spotlight or make do safely with their humdrum jobs .
3 At the Passover Eve meal the stories of the plagues are recited , and with each one a finger is dipped in a glass of wine and a drop of the wine let fall on to a plate .
4 The grain was too complex and cross for him , the blade stuck , and in the same instant Isambard stretched both arms over the boy 's shoulders and seized his hands , forcing them apart and wringing them until he twisted with pain and let go both the knife and the wood .
5 ‘ If you 're in the top 10 and let go even for an instant then you might as well be 200 , ’ she says .
6 Let go aft ! ’
7 let Robert sing it , let go on , sing it Grace .
8 Well let go then !
9 let go then , let go
10 which balloon has the mouse let go off and you have to follow them .
11 So you let go gently then you do the same on the other side , and then of course you 've got this piece free .
12 And so they sat with clammy hands for an hour and a half and let go only when the lights came back on .
13 Finally Travis let himelf down by his arms and dropped to the ground .
14 No I mean , I think you just leave it there and let come around again .
15 Anyway , she had a four-year-old boy called Keith , who she never let play outside unless she was watching , because there was no defensible space .
16 No get , let start off yep on erm show you
17 There is a name to conjure with and let slip easily of the tongue .
18 HOWARD KENDALL last night hailed Peter Beardsley as the near-priceless asset that Liverpool let slip away .
19 It was a phrase that Baden-Powell let slip more than once in his speeches and writings in the thickening twilight before war .
20 Moreover it houses Religious Studies students who make use not only of classes within the faculty but also of courses in the Arts Faculty which specialise in cultures and religions other than Christian .
21 The national party organizations increasingly make use also of press and poster advertising .
22 Many karateka get this wrong and make use only of the arm action .
23 In a letter published in ‘ The Times ’ on 2 March the Cardinal said , ‘ Whatever stance individuals make take over the morality of the nuclear deterrent , there must be general agreement on the aim of preventing the spread of nuclear weapons to non-nuclear states .
24 The complexities of a modern developed economy , however , make barter totally impractical for most purposes .
25 That , and we 've had this in the past , where I would say that people that live in Yarbury North and South probably do earn less and live in houses that probably are , do n't have as big gardens and things like that , so the natu the nature of the is that they probably do earn less money erm but I I do n't consider those to be ghettos at all .
26 I bought my Elonex from the manufacturer , but do think carefully about the amount of help you may require .
27 ‘ The publicity schemes they do think up , ’ he said .
28 And he , all amazed , do think right , nothing relevant is happening .
29 Others may and do think otherwise .
30 Editors do think explicitly about timing and they are not motivated merely to be the first to print a ‘ scoop ’ : they keep stories until the time is ripe .
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