Example sentences of "[adv] to take [adv prt] the " in BNC.

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1 Sadly the ex England Captain is n't fit enough to take up the offer of a first division runabout before the Japanese season gets underway .
2 Sadly the ex England Captain is n't fit enough to take up the offer of a first division runabout before the Japanese season gets underway .
3 None of these operations , however , was strong enough to take on the role of nurturing talent or providing a supportive home for creative filmmakers .
4 Is there anybody brave enough to take on the post of SAA Executive Secretary ?
5 There were some excellent investigative programmes from Panorama , World in Action , This Week , First Tuesday and Twenty-Twenty Vision , which probed government scandals in the 1980s , but no journalist was bold enough to take on the Prime Minister herself .
6 Meanwhile , assistant manager Terry McDermott claimed Newcastle are good enough to take on the Premier League now and still be winners .
7 But religious language not only provided a link between different political constituencies , it offered a set of concepts , a rhetoric of resistance and a strength of moral certainty powerful enough to take on the weight of the medical and political establishment .
8 Since the birth of their sons , Felix ( now aged four ) and Max ( one ) , the Roberts were lucky enough to take over the raised ground floor which not only gave them more space but also allowed them vital access to the garden .
9 She 's sixteen , old enough to take over the housekeeping . ’
10 The other way to find out is to cover each eye in turn ; if there 's a squint , the bad eye will generally move outwards to take over the job of seeing .
11 He sought only to take up the challenge they had thrown down in their fight against Fascism and Britain .
12 Sir Michael Angus made it a double whammy for Unilever as the outgoing plc chairman , soon to take up the cudgels on behalf of the CBI , entered the International Marketing Hall of Fame .
13 Eventually , the polyps bud in a different way and produce miniature medusae which detach themselves and wriggle away to take up the swimming life once more .
14 The Ministry is due shortly to take over the countryside premium scheme .
15 Within a very few weeks of his father 's death , Lewis found himself obliged once more to take up the routines of an Oxford term : weekly tutorials , college meetings and lectures .
16 Non-European countries were more and more to take up the methods and manners of Europe .
17 Accordingly she wrote to her favourite niece Lilian Baylis , then in South Africa , requesting that she should return home to take over the management of the theatre .
18 He stood up and bent his knees slightly to take out the stiffness .
19 Deciding now to take up the practice of law again , Herbert thought that the best opening would be to build up a country practice .
20 Partly because this is one void pressure flow study , and so we have evolved from here to take on the sort of technology that was pioneered in this country by David , using a simple ambulatory erm study , and we 've added to this erm er a hard wire connection from a flowmeter .
21 Berti Vogts is acutely aware of how close that match was in Sweden and he knows his side has not come here to take on the equivalent of a San Marino . ’
22 However , he decided instead to take up the post he had been offered of Captain and Governor of the Isle of Wight .
23 Not only that , but once the wharf had been modernized for the construction of Hinkley C , it was highly likely that it would be used again to take out the radioactive debris from the dismantling of Hinkley A. This had never been mentioned before .
24 As there was at that time no one else to take up the cudgels nationally on their behalf this service was of great value to the deaf and dumb population , and is no doubt one explanation for the BDDA surviving its early difficult years .
25 It 'll also if we start to take action provoke somebody else to take over the schemes ,
26 ‘ Perhaps the time has come for someone else to take on the burden .
27 Why not , my wife says , knock a hole through the boys ' bedroom wall , pinch a three foot six strip off it and make a new landing passage and extend the walk-in cupboard , forward to take up the old landing and sideways to build a space out to the main part of the stairs .
28 I think the pr if there has to be a primary purpose it is a actually to take out the traffic which does n't belong in Harrogate
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