Example sentences of "[verb] [verb] [adv prt] [prep] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 He got asked out by that Kate .
2 Christie was to be married at Easter , but Ann planned to go over in late February to help with the wedding preparations and also , to take Sarah and see her settled in before she started her job .
3 Am I right in thinking that you would n't want to go on with these incursions ?
4 ‘ We 're desperate to put that right because we do n't want to go down as one-season wonders .
5 ‘ I did n't want to go back under controlled circumstances , ’ he explained , ‘ I wanted to get on .
6 ‘ Do you want to go back to that place in Brittany again ?
7 Does my right hon. Friend mean that British industrialists do not want to go back to national plans , solemn and binding undertakings , high inflation , nationalisation , high taxation and trade union unrest ?
8 ‘ You do n't want to go back to Red Cottage ? ’
9 I find some people on the streets are quite like , pigheaded and they do n't really want to go back for some reason really .
10 Davis agreed to go up to 200 guineas , and in the event secured the unseen yearling for a mere 160 guineas .
11 Um I know er at the in the clinic and all that kind of thing , I mean goes on about these people quite a bit .
12 Many of the knitting pattern diagrams are very simple shapes and make drawing up to full size and shaping , as far as armhole and neck , quite basic .
13 I have already discussed the notion of relative novelty in the course of an analysis of habituation ( Chapter 2 , pp. 44–5 ) and failed to come up with hard evidence that might require us to accept its reality .
14 As Clinton went from strength to strength , Bush failed to struggle out of that image of being weak .
15 Counterfeit car parts uncovered included fake brake pads which got mixed up with genuine ones , Mr Northcott said .
16 But he was a bit of a womaniser and got mixed up in some scandal ; I never knew the whole story .
17 He tells her , too , about the toy drawer in which the pencil-case was originally lost , and the characteristic choking dusty smell it would develop as the toys in it became mixed up with each other to form a kind of solid pudding , which had to be taken out at the end of each school holidays , and separated once again into its components .
18 I was supposed to be running the operation but I got caught up with other business .
19 Couple of chaps at the school got booted out for that stuff and I never did get round to it . ’
20 At times like that , you call on your mates , and Kenny Everett kindly got us out of a spot of trouble there and agreed to come on at short notice .
21 It was as much to disprove some of their absurd assumptions as to help you prove your own theories that I agreed to come in on this project .
22 An exceptional shooting accessory that you 'll want to pass on to future generations .
23 Mr do you want to come in at this stage ?
24 Until I find out more I do not want to come down on either side . ’
25 Until I find out more I do not want to come down on either side . ’
26 Do you want to come back on that Mr or do you want to wait a few moments ?
27 I want to go through in chronological order , so I turn to the back of the stack and find the lowest deposit , the first record of the new Unit .
28 We have brought pride back to Teesside and we want to go on to greater things . ’
29 The Leeds Permanent and Abbey National want to go up by 1.25 points or more .
30 The project has developed out of previous research funded by the ESRC on decision making processes in transport operations .
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