Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] [verb] you for [art] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ I got to charge you for the call-out , ’ said the cop . |
2 | ‘ I want to thank you for the roses , ’ she said . |
3 | ‘ I want to thank you for the last five minutes . ’ |
4 | Two months later this tram-driver stopped me : ‘ I want to see you for a minute . |
5 | For example , although we do not have in English the grammaticalization of the levels of respect that exist in Javanese , we do have means of expressing degrees of respect , largely by choices in the use of expressions : thus ( 31 ) would generally be a more polite request than ( 30 ) : ( 30 ) I want to see you for a moment ( 31 ) I wondered if I could possibly see you for a moment So by taking at first just the grammaticalized or encoded features of context in the world 's languages , we would have both something like a " discovery procedure " for relevant functions of language , and a constraint on the relatively vacuous theorizing that often attends speculation about the " functions of speech " . |
6 | I want to commend you for the excellent job you have done on the Missing Girl story , from the time it broke until her body was found . |
7 | done it , she said I was reading it here and I meant to ask you for the , she said , anyway when he come back I said have you found them out , alright , he said I 've had a go he said |
8 | I did take you for a couple staying there together , and normally I would have retreated smartly and come back here again , but for what had already happened . |
9 | erm I ca n't hear for Dorothy 's car , what did you say ? is he going I think I 'd better I said thank you for the cake |
10 | ‘ On behalf of the family of my late brother , Robert , I wish to thank you for the compassion and care shown to him by your organization during his long and difficult illness . |
11 | But I need to see you for a moment . |
12 | ‘ I have forgiven you for the same ! ’ |
13 | I wanted to thank you for the wonderful pair of walking boots — a prize from the February issue of Outdoor Action . |
14 | If someone was looking for The Bar in those days — because there was no name written up or sign for it , no lights at all , and not even a number on the door , Madame liked to keep it that way even when she did n't have to any more — I mean when she opened up we may all have been in a sort of hiding , and not many people knew about The Bar and our life there , but it was n't that way later , and now you know we can have lights and advertising and you see boys queueing up outside every night , very public , and I like to see that — but in those days , in those days if somebody arranged to meet you for a date there , and it was their first time and they were n't sure how to find us , you 'd joke with them , and you 'd say well first there is a wedding , and then there 's a death , and there 's the news , and then there 's us ; meaning , first there 's the shop with the flowers , the real ones , and next door to that is the undertaker 's with the fake flowers in the window , china , all dusty ; and then the newsagent 's and magazine shop , and then right next door to that is The Bar . |
15 | For example , there is a right way and a wrong way of answering a stranger who has asked you for the time . |
16 | ( Beware of those therapists who seek to charge you for a complete course of treatment at the very beginning , as it is almost impossible to know how well each individual will respond and therefore how many sessions will be needed . ) |