Example sentences of "[verb] [adv] take [adj] " in BNC.

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1 If you 've finished with your face you 'd better take that dog out . ’
2 A farmer might tell one of his workmen : ‘ You 'd better take that dutfin [ bridle ] to the knacker 's . ’
3 Oh what 's that one Bare Naked Ladies , I 'd better not play that just at the moment oh what 's this one oh Billy Joel so so I 'd better take that out you I 'm always tempted to forget what I 've actually played and what I 'm not going to play .
4 You 'd better take that brolly with you .
5 I said we 'd better take two days over the trip and make a stop-over on the way .
6 I think I 'd better take these books back down again I think , oh mind you I can put them up here perhaps .
7 You 'd better take some sandwiches . "
8 ‘ You 'd better take this seriously . ’
9 Okay , I think we 'd better take this slowly .
10 But in fact , if you look through bibliographies and citations in the literature , you find it 's hardly ever cited , and when it is cited , people seldom if ever , seemed to refer to what Freud er says in it , let alone take any notice of it .
11 KATRIN KRABBE 'S hopes of avoiding a four-year doping ban received a boost yesterday when it was revealed that influential scientific reports backed up her case that she did not take banned steroids .
12 He was advised by doctors Continued on Page 3 Continued from Page 1 that a degenerative disc might need surgery if he did not take complete rest .
13 Again , although I visited her regularly , taking little presents ; remembered her birthday and saw to it that her sons did the same ; looked after her once when she was ill ; and respected my husband 's love for her , I did not take much notice of her suggestions : ‘ My mother seems to think …
14 One approach is to hire a sociologist to peer into the black box ( the quotation from Heusch 1981 : 423 , and p. 46 in this book about the role of the sociologist is apposite here ) , in a similar way to anthropologists who sought to tell colonial administrators how to avoid irritating the people they governed ( although , according to Feuchtwang 1973 , the administrators did not take much notice of what they had to say ) .
15 As Erica Macdonald admits , it did not take much to make the girls steer away .
16 It did not take much to reason that international capitalism had failed and that a new order must replace it .
17 My detectives had established your many moves and it did not take much intelligence to realise why . ’
18 If they did not take legal advice before buying property together , its division could be complicated .
19 I was interested in my work and I did not take one day 's holiday during the next two years .
20 Have no doubt in your mind about that because we did not take one of our representatives to negotiate with the guard force to enhance your and their membership that is not the ball game I 'm not playing it and we wo n't do that and you can rest assured we will pursue it to Bridlington if need be .
21 A study showed that the level of stress related illness among employees in a department which provided support as described was much lower than in a similar department that did not take such precautions .
22 But the law did not take specific account of Arabs who left their homes for fear that Israeli forces might cause them harm — the reason most Arabs give for their sudden departure .
23 The controversial nature of Gates 's nomination was highlighted when many of his supporters , most notably Boren , warned him that they would be watching closely to ensure that he did not take retaliatory action against his critics within the CIA .
24 He did not take many head blows . ’
25 But it did not take many weeks of the Lancashire cotton famine ( due to the interruption of raw material supplies by the American Civil War ) to reduce even such a family to charity .
26 But he moved towards Paris in late March : everyone knew that it did not take six weeks to get from Paris to Attigny .
27 John Lade , later to be MP for Southwark , shortly after the passage of the Abjuration Act of 1702 , said " that his friends , meaning the Jacks , were milksops for kicking at oaths , asserting they should never be able to do anything if they , his friends , did not take all the oaths that could be imposed " .
28 First , it did not take all the development value .
29 Those who were closest to her were going to make sure she did not take that gift for granted .
30 For years nurses had wanted special pay arrangements which recognized that they did not take industrial action in pursuit of their pay claims .
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