Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] [prep] [pers pn] to the " in BNC.
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1 | A friend of the Websters ' son ( who was in the Middle East ) took to visiting the house rather often , and one evening he asked me to go with him to the cinema in Bletchley . |
2 | Leslie did not want me to go with him to the station , and so I watched him from the hotel-room window , his jaunty walk bravely exaggerated . |
3 | A man I 'd met only twice , a bit of a loner , invited me to go with him to the West Indies . |
4 | Thoughts about how the spectacles would appear to me if I moved towards them leftwards must be related in the correct way to thoughts about how they would look if I moved above them to the right ; thoughts about their being artefacts must be related to thoughts about their not existing before a certain time or not coming into existence in the kitchen as the kettle boils . |
5 | I went with him to the glass door and stopped . |
6 | When I reached the House of Andrus I spoke of it to the other women and we said a prayer . |
7 | Once a decision is made it must be communicated in writing to the claimant , who then has three months in which to appeal against it to the SSAT . |
8 | In a letter to The Times , published on 9 May 1931 , a correspondent signing himself ‘ Old Brightonian ’ recalled an occasion when Woods was bowling in a school match and the wicket-keeper , standing some ten yards back from the wicket , was unable to stop a ball which flashed by him to the boundary but was able to field the stump which the ball had knocked out of the ground . |
9 | Who cared about him to the depths of her soul , even though he was , in his own mind , completely underserving of her love . |
10 | ‘ I believe , ’ said the commissioner who reported on it to the Health of Towns Commission in 1845 , |
11 | She moved past him to the kitchen , where she put the kettle on the gas . |
12 | ‘ Signor Skof , we would like you to come with us to the barracks to answer some questions , ’ one of them said ; and the other : ‘ You will be allowed home this afternoon . ’ |
13 | Smiling shakily back and in response to his urging , she sank with him to the floor . |
14 | She tiptoed past them to the chest of drawers , took out a pair of shorts and a sweatshirt and slipped back downstairs to the kitchen . |
15 | ‘ You came with us to the Fleet . ’ |
16 | She came with him to the door . |
17 | She came with him to the door , and the light from the hall cut an orange path across the roadway . |
18 | She came with him to the door , uneasy , perhaps scared . |
19 | She walked past him to the door , and though he followed and came quickly up to her side he did not again offer her his hand . |
20 | She walked with him to the bus-stop , would not let him walk her back to the flat , said not to follow her ; she 'd watch , be angry . |
21 | She walked with him to the garage , and as he got into her car she leaned forward and kissed his cheek lightly . |
22 | it was very clever , I watched the first couple because people who like Harry Enfield 's comic characters switched on , just to see what he was like and before you knew it you were twenty minutes into a half hour programme and you stuck with it to the end . |
23 | Her pulses racing , she looked past him to the dizzy drop through the hole in the cliff , to the sea below . |
24 | She smiled as she went with him to the door . |
25 | She hurried past him to the stairs . |
26 | We are interested and associated but not absorbed and should European statesmen address us in the words which were used of old — Shall we speak for thee to the king or captain of the host ? ' — we should reply , Nay sir , for we dwell among our own people' ’ . |
27 | Unless we hear from you to the contrary within the next days , you will be held as admitting liability ’ . |
28 | ‘ Of course we rejoice with you , we rejoice with you to the full . |
29 | And we went with them to the zoo . |
30 | We went with him to the ward . |