Example sentences of "[verb] [pers pn] to [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 The shaft of the arrow protruding from my back occasionally knocked against something , bringing me to a gasping halt .
2 By that time , the Scottish team had gone through three practice sessions , while the Aussies from Queensland expect their post-season training to see them to a successful defence of the tournament , which starts today .
3 The House of Lords has concluded that our Sunday trading laws are unclear and has therefore referred them to the European Court of Justice to clarify whether they are compatible with European law .
4 It 's better to take them with you in the car rather than consign them to the chilly furniture van .
5 Philpott led them to a pale-blue door at the end of the passage .
6 At noon , the exhausted Pack gathered together and Brown Owl led them to a shady area .
7 At the top of the staircase various Chamberlains , dressed in gold embroidered jackets , welcomed the guests and led them to the Grand Master of Ceremonies .
8 And members are still less than enamoured with their district council group leader , Coun John Richardson from Willington , who led them to the disastrous defeat .
9 Bloom et al. " s study of how to is acquired in infinitival complement constructions led them to the clear conclusion that " the children learned to with the meaning " " direction towards " " and not as a meaningless syntactic marker " ( 1984 : 391 ) .
10 Anderson captained Ireland on their short tour of France , led them to an unexpected victory over a French XV and keeps the job now but age and waning powers put a question-mark over his selection for the team at all .
11 But the archaeologists ' obsession with the past had blinded them to the real cause of the lamentations they witnessed along the river .
12 If a potential investor should assume that ‘ preference ’ means that he should prefer them to the ordinary shares he would be sorely in need of professional advice .
13 ‘ Let's go and have a drink , then you can treat me to a celebratory dinner ! ’
14 Pain , boredom and badgering of some very kind nurses bring me to a steam-age typewriter in the hospital 's occupational therapy department .
15 However it is a very difficult and time-consuming operation to read through the evaluations and to compare them to the original project document .
16 I skulked down one side of the garden and went through the arch which led me to a walled garden in the middle of which there was a fountain playing .
17 I gave my orders and they led me to a private room and brought me some writing paper and a pen .
18 Where was Um Al-Farajh , I asked him , and he led me to a large square of fir trees and pointed to the earth .
19 The house we sat in was still in chaos , so she led me to the sunny kitchen , where we talked and drank coffee , surrounded by boxes and plants and the smell of paint .
20 And her white Reeboks screeched at the marble as she turned and led me to the waiting forms .
21 The second day continued where the first day left off : four catches by Hick to equal the record for a Test against Pakistan originally set by the little-remembered spinner Jim McConnon of Glamorgan in 1954 , and then my researches led me to the remarkable fact that John Birch , who played for Notts from 1973 to 1988 , was known as ‘ Bonk ’ .
22 Where in his character-drawing O'Brian touches the reader 's imagination by the unexpected , Forester satisfied his readers by helping them to a complete acquaintance with his officers and men .
23 From time to time we still had meat , for cattle still had to be slaughtered and there was little transport , because of the fuel shortage , to carry them to the wholesale market .
24 Such incidents have now been reported sufficiently often in langurs and in lions , for example , to invalidate an early explanation attributing them to a high population density .
25 It closed the banks and immediately sold them to the Richmond-based Signet Banking Corp .
26 Typically then they operate to defeat the title of the unpaid seller ( let us call him C ) who has entrusted his goods to a buyer who , without paying C , has in turn sold them to an innocent purchaser .
27 You can do more than play games : you can add them , multiply them , and develop them to a remarkable depth .
28 Mr. Wall argued that the exercise of the discretion which arises as a result of the finding of ‘ acquiescence ’ made by the Court of Appeal , is limited to considering the nature and quality of the acquiescence itself and would not entitle the court to take into account ‘ welfare ’ considerations relating specifically to the children unless the court were able to find that there had been established a grave risk that the return of the children would expose them to an intolerable situation under article 13 ( b ) .
29 The central figure points me to a single chair , placed opposite .
30 Once out of the village they picked up speed and took a road that would zigzag through five hamlets before bringing them to the only cart track that wound up the lower slopes of the mountain .
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