Example sentences of "[conj] put them [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 And suddenly he took the rumours and put them on like a coat .
2 Companies generally take their guests down to Sunsail 's Port Solent base near Portsmouth in the evening , give them dinner and put them up in a hotel .
3 When you 've finished , you just tear off all your flip charts , and put them up round the room or something so people can
4 They had whalebone in these stays and we used to cut pieces about half an inch long and in the daytime , I used to make a bag full and put them in between the doors and I 'd go round the first time and put them in and when I went round later , if that whalebone was missing , I 'd make enquiries .
5 I took out the 8000 and put them down on the table .
6 The boy came in through the back carrying Russell 's blanket roll and carbine and put them down on the passenger bench .
7 At eighteen it 's so easy to romanticise things and put them down in a song .
8 He saw things in a flash and put them down in a sentence or at most a paragraph .
9 Vivienne would pick them up and say , it 's alright I 'll just wash them down and put them back on the rack .
10 and she says she sat , she sat er still you know with her arms folded and all like that and she says , oh she says I think you er collect the books and stamp them and put them back on the shelves and she said they all laughed , but she got the job in opposition to er , a few others you know
11 She stared at it for a couple of minutes , then , with a prolonged sigh , began to take them out and put them back into the cupboards and drawers .
12 Crawford scooped up the suds in his hands and put them back in the machine — through the open door .
13 Give them needle and put them back in the stalls again .
14 She turned it up as hot as it would go and put them in on a tray .
15 ‘ They 're certainly tearing things down and putting them up at the moment .
16 My hon. Friend the Member for Westminster , North characteristically set the record straight about manpower allocations in the police force and about the critical role of Her Majesty 's chief inspector of constabulary in objectively advising the Home Secretary on correct force levels and on the identification of posts suitable for civilianisation — for that releases policemen and women from desk jobs and puts them back on the beat , which is what the right hon. and learned Member for Warley , West wants .
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