Example sentences of "[verb] [verb] them [adv prt] of the " in BNC.

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1 There are outright racists holding Tory membership cards and I want to see them out of the party . ’
2 Thomas Cook said the merger would create an effective duopoly and tour operators would find themselves ‘ subject to debilitating price wars funded by the dominant position of the duopoly and designed to drive them out of the industry ’ .
3 At a signal from Sybil , Rachel helped to coax them out of the water and into the changing-rooms where David was helping Danny to dress .
4 Dynamius tried to lock them out of the city , but he was tricked by Gundulf .
5 If you want to take them out of the book
6 Bromley was quoted by The Listener in August as saying of Sky : ‘ We intend to shoot them out of the sky . ’
7 We have got to put them out of the game .
8 They must shout at them , slap their faces , magically coerce them , or manage to force them out of the corridor .
9 I 've just got to get them out of the way before I get back to work . ’
10 Climbing one branch higher , Virginia reached out and stroked the cat 's head ; then , gently , she placed her hand round its hind legs and began to ease them out of the fork .
11 And grabbing three of the smallest around their necks , he started pushing them out of the back door , into the fresh air , and towards the outer door of the boarding section .
12 How else could he have got them out of the keep ?
13 ‘ We can try shaming them out of the drugs business and say how un-Islamic it is ’ suggested Abdul Haq .
14 This was never more threatened from the right than in the years before 1914 and a leader who had respected constitutional niceties at that time would have driven them out of the system where they could have been far more dangerous .
15 no , no , no , I thought oh god I 'm gon na have to get them out of the house
16 On the other hand , it can create a system through which goals may be achieved , having taken them out of the realm of pure ideology .
17 They must have chased them out of the yard and made sure they took off in all directions .
18 That means keeping them out of the unpredictable British May weather .
19 He had joined them out of the press in the midst of a guard of taciturn Merkut troopers who were economical in their employment of the brute force necessary to clear their master 's path .
20 It was much smaller than the one that had brought them out of the Store , but still quite big enough .
21 So much so , that the Commissioner , Lieutenant-Colonel Sir William Sumner , had taken them out of the formal structure and appointed Bragg as his personal detective assistant .
22 He was glad that he did n't throw out the Christmas cards from his son and daughter in 1987 , for every year since he had taken them out of the suitcase on top of the wardrobe and displayed them in his own room as if they had come in with the morning post .
23 Communiqués issued recently by the Department of Antiquities confirm that some of these historic items are still in Iraq in the hands of merchants who are trying to smuggle them out of the country for huge sums of money .
24 You could find yourself in the ludicrous situation where you have to take them out of the country for half-an-hour and take them back in again .
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