Example sentences of "[verb] take [pron] [prep] [art] [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Since then her work with the band has taken her on a Scottish tour which included the Edinburgh Folk Festival , and she also performs with the four other ladies who make up Belfast 's first close-harmony vocal group ‘ Cuigear Ban ’ . |
2 | Her fate has taken her on a different journey , a route where the monarchy is secondary to her true vocation . |
3 | Dr Halden is married to my daughter and has taken her on an extended tour of the Continent . ’ |
4 | His research has taken him through the alpine and arid zones of Australia ; botanical history is one of his many interests , and he specialises in the ‘ Compositae ’ family . |
5 | His American tour kicked off on day one at the Tournament of Champions in Southern California and has taken him to the two major Pro-Ams — the Bob Hope and the Crosby ( aforementioned Pebble Beach National Pro-Am ) — a trio of Florida events — Doral , the Honda Classic and the Players ' Championship — as well as The Masters , the Colonial , the Memorial , the season-ending Nabisco Championship and a slew of less-hallowed events in between . |
6 | Nicholson 's new boy Adrian Maguire has thirty four winners already … but a double from Richard Dunwoody has taken him into the twenties |
7 | THE BUCK STOPS HERE : Trevor McDonald 's distinguished career has taken him from a poor , but loving , childhood in Trinidad to being ITN 's first solo anchorman Picture : BILL KENNEDY |
8 | The Renaissance was a rebirth of the Alexandrian-Roman spirit , and it has taken us on the same path . |
9 | ‘ The Mirror has taken it from the limited audience it has had right out into the open . |
10 | And again in abbreviated form that , I just want to take you through the molecular basis for endotoxin action . |
11 | Oh we 're not , we do n't need to take it till the next one . |
12 | He wants to take her into the Royal Infirmary for tests . ’ |
13 | I see let take it from the other end , why did you have to take the insertion of the contingency fund of the estimates |
14 | 3 ) In the instruction manual for the BOSS ME-5 it says to take it to a recognised dealer to get the back-up memory battery replaced . |
15 | The ancient servitor , who drove with a slack rein and a sublime disregard of the pot-holes , seemed to take it as a personal affront that Miss Kyte had kept him waiting for more than two hours . |
16 | Father had promised to take me with the added bonus of an afternoon off school . |
17 | All right , ’ she said obediently , deciding to take it as a professional instruction . |
18 | He had offered to take them to the local dressmaker 's to have them seamed in to a more fashionable line , but Gina would n't even let him do that . |
19 | Unfortunately , many people seem to take it as a personal insult ( on behalf of their garden ) if one says that there are n't really any plants or flowers worth pressing , so to prevent any hurt feelings I usually try to pick a few items that are possible candidates for pressing , which seems to go down much better than completely refusing someone 's kind offer . |
20 | After demonstrations outside his home and threats to his life , Tshisekedi refused the position , denying that he had agreed to take it at a secret meeting with the President . |
21 | Oh I 've got to take you in the Chinese shop . |
22 | Oh , I 've got to take you in the Chinese shop |
23 | He was going to take me to the derelict château he and Montaine had discovered in a clearing in one of the forests . |
24 | He said right then I suppose you 're going to take me over the wee pub now . |
25 | I 'm going to take you to a little place that 'll sell us a bottle of scotch in the back room , and nobody any the wiser . |
26 | I should n't have took it in the first place . |
27 | The flood apart from ruining their home made their own car which should have taken them for the fully-paid honeymoon in Scotland , float off down the road and crash into another car . |
28 | That would have taken them past the vital February sailing time along what Whitehall claims is an organised escape route . |
29 | He was described as an enthusiastic , determined and well-turned-out soldier with leadership qualities which could have taken him to the top warrant officer rank . |
30 | Some might have taken him for a mere apprentice enchanter who had run away from his master out of defiance , boredom , fear and a lingering taste for heterosexuality . |