Example sentences of "[noun] [to-vb] she to [art] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 She had also found herself a sponsor to support her to the tune of £100 a year .
2 Her friend Angela , who worked for Tiller every year in pantomime , asked Jane to accompany her to the stage door of the Hippodrome Theatre , Manchester , to pick up a contract .
3 The driver was given directions to take her to the doctor that Julius had contacted .
4 The war was just over , and she was climbing aboard an RAF transport to take her to the demobilisation centre .
5 And then , after I 'd gone round to Tesco 's I went to see to collect grandma to take her to the train .
6 Then he put a hand on her elbow to guide her to the door .
7 With the watery light in imminent danger of failing , we wedged our empty mugs in the sink , dropped the dock lines and took Islander out into Southampton Water to put her to the test .
8 She told Anne that the man , Ronald , had sent a taxi to take her to the dance and had bought her a casket of chocolates as they went in , but she had felt uneasy several times during the evening .
9 ‘ In this case I 'm surprised that Stella has n't had the sense to allow Bill to take her to a doctor in Hastings right away . ’
10 She urged on the days until the chance o f their transfer away , she wrote waspy letters to her mother three times a week , and whenever possible she badgered her Yuri to take her to the shops at Pot'ma .
11 She would ask Jazz to take her to the cinema .
12 She asked the driver to take her to the estate agent .
13 Well , she would have to go home and get her dad to run her to the rave .
14 Finding herself unable to gain entry the plaintiff obtained an ex parte injunction to readmit her to the premises .
15 As an old woman , many years later , she asked her son to take her to the sea , which she had heard of but never seen .
16 They had lost significance for her yet still had the power to bring her to the verge of tears , reminding her of what they had once meant : of one Easter when the scent had been a gift , of autumn afternoons when she had taken her baby in a pushchair from one to another of the now disappeared junk shops , buying Victorian china , pieces of old lace and old books , looking forward to the future .
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