Example sentences of "[verb] [pers pn] [v-ing] [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 I do n't want them growing up like the Hales .
2 I hoped it was just a passing phase , sparked off by her catching me fooling around in the Plaster Room , and thanked my guardian angel for the way Old Red had just covered up for me .
3 ‘ That 's the easiest way of getting your firewood — cut the trees at the edge of the forest and send them rolling down to the bottom .
4 I explained the situation , after she found me jerking about on the bed one afternoon .
5 You would n't catch me walking back to the house alone at night .
6 She gave Charles the address , and looked so happy and excited when she asked the Stage Door Keeper to get her the Wimbledon number , that he quite forgave her for keeping him hanging about in the draughty passage outside his box .
7 One morning , Santa found him lying down on the snow , staring at a dead flower with tears dropping off his little cheeks .
8 If not , place it facing out into the living space .
9 Justin Simpson , in his article on the Stamford waits in The Reliquary in July 1885 , describes them crying out in the night after the performance of a tune these words by Shakespeare ;
10 Nicandra could n't watch them going out of the room together .
11 And my magic wrought true — for it was into your time I came , to Starr Hills , where I had walked four hundred years before ; and coming to meet me was a man who asked me simply if I were a mermaid , for he had seen me walking out of the sea . ’
12 A sudden movement or an abrupt noise will send them skittering back to the safety of the water .
13 " Perhaps I should have let that precious mother of yours catch you sneaking back into the house . "
14 We take a look at nine of the hottest designs around that 'll send you panting off to the outdoor shops
15 ‘ She insisted she 'd seen you heading out through the woods at about half-past nine , shortly before she missed it .
16 He listened to it , trying to will her to the phone ; imagining her coming back to the flat after being out ; she might hear the phone from the street … now she would put the key in the lock … now running up the stairs … now dashing in , dripping , short of breath , to grab the receiver … now … now .
17 Have n't seen him coming out of the car .
18 I 've seen her going along to the library regularly , pretty well every night .
19 Her denials were useless because he said he had returned to Kington Square early that morning and seen her coming out of the flat arm in arm with a man .
20 The bank 's ethics code prevented it cashing in on the bonanza reaped by others from the pound 's departure from the European exchange rate mechanism last September .
21 There were no chairs or tables in the kitchens , so we ate it standing up around the cookers and stoves .
22 He ate it standing up by the sink , and deliberately left the little pot on the marble work surface .
23 Do n't want you falling in with the wrong types , do we ?
24 I do n't want you walking down to the pub in this , in the dark cold night .
25 Yes I know what you mean but I do n't fancy you messing about with the grasscutter .
26 He could see them coming out under the hand : And close your eyes with holy dread .
27 " You did n't mind me looking in at the window , Stephen ?
28 ‘ Now I can see him going on to the next one , the way he is playing .
29 ‘ I do n't see him going back to the Council , ’ Dann said banteringly .
30 He was very normal , you could see him walking down to the bank Monday to Friday , but he 's got this completely eccentric side to him . ’
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