Example sentences of "help [pers pn] [to-vb] the [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Angevin interests lay in the support of the Welfs as the strongest power in north Germany , who might help them to maintain the crumbling Angevin empire . |
2 | This will help you to appreciate the unique state of the patient and just how the illness is affecting him . |
3 | It would certainly help you to have the following information : |
4 | He will help you to observe the legal requirements and to name Executors to carry out your instructions , to appoint guardians if necessary and to cancel any previous Wills . |
5 | Both will help you to find the precise word you need and to lighten your readers ' darkness with vivid analogy . |
6 | On these cassettes you will hear the voice of the hypnotherapist , who will help you to achieve the desired state , then give you the same suggestions that he or she would make if you were in the consulting room ; finally , the hypnotherapist will wake you up again . |
7 | He had been invited to give her " private lessons in her brother 's philosophy " which ( as she had rightly decided ) would help her to propagate the Nietzschean cause . |
8 | Italy has refused responsibility for the waste and Turkey " has no wish to jeopardise its relations with a country which could help it to enter the European Community " . |
9 | All these ideas are fun , of course , but they do not help us to answer the original question . |
10 | It might help us to get the full picture if we could talk to your wife . |
11 | This type of explanation may help us to understand the one-sided nature of exchange relationships with the Continent , noting also that the English probably had no direct access to a valuable and durable raw material without going to the extent of deep mining . |
12 | Dr Nancy Harrison , RSPB marine policy officer , said : ‘ Any information about the use of gill nets and the effects they have on marine life , will help us to understand the true extent and nature of the problem , and to identify any trouble spots . ’ |
13 | If we had any hope that our eventual account of knowledge would help us to reject the sceptical arguments , this particular account seems to make matters worse rather than better . |