Example sentences of "[vb infin] [pron] [adv prt] to the [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | Paul Johnson 's production is a masterwork of clarity and while it does n't quite haul itself up to the avant-garde peaks of Celtic Frost , it hammers off at enough tangents to cover almost all the bases . |
2 | Paul Johnson 's production is a masterwork of clarity and while it does n't quite haul itself up to the avant-garde peaks of Celtic Frost , it hammers off at enough tangents to cover almost all the bases . |
3 | I 'd like to just bring you back to the first question you asked , which was how do you define sexual harassment . |
4 | ‘ Do n't start that nonsense again or they 'll carry you off to the funny farm , ’ Otley said wearily . |
5 | If she could not get out the train would carry her on to the next station , to London Bridge , it would carry her on under the river . |
6 | ‘ We must drive out Medoc , we must send him back to the Dark Ireland , and we must seal up the terrible Gateway that he opened before the creatures and the monsters of that Realm flood through it . |
7 | Do n't bring it over to the first character , leave it exactly where it is . |
8 | I did take it up with the Attorney-General but he felt he could n't refer it on to the next court . |
9 | Just ask the porter would you help me carry it over to the next platform . |
10 | ‘ And I 'll carry it on to the bitter end if that 's what it takes ! ’ |
11 | This feller said , ‘ I did n't alter me beat book ’ , and chief constable said , ‘ All right , we 'll send it over to the Forensic Department . ’ |
12 | ‘ You started this , Brother , so we 'll see it through to the bitter end . |
13 | Entering the Portal will transport you back to the five doors where you can visit another country and city . |
14 | I 'm not telling you where I am ; you 'll only tell Angus and he 'll tell the police and they 'll take me back to the fucking hospital . ’ |
15 | When you pick up the rec , the , the hands it will actually take you through to the nearest police control room area now , if it 's on the M eleven then most of the calls will go into Chelmsford , our police headquarters , once you cross over the borders and go into Metropolitan area , then that goes up to the Scotland Yard in their control rooms . |
16 | Erm , can I take you on to the next one which is twelve B two . |
17 | In Holloway they do n't take you out to the ante-natal clinic or get you a scan or nothing ; Styal they do . |
18 | And she 'd take him off to the second-hand bookstall which specialized in the politics of the left , or to attend a useful meeting , and stand around with banners . |
19 | He drove a wide circle out of the car park towards the slip-road that would take him back to the dual carriageway . |
20 | Pete suggested that in a few days ' time he could take her out to the nearest big town on the coast , and there she could look for clothes in the department stores and check out the library for the addresses of any useful organisations or people to contact . |
21 | They can take it through to the ancestral ballroom . ’ |
22 | Erm and and and we could take it back to the hundred days episode when the great powers have all er decided to er er to prevent Napoleon from making a comeback in France . |
23 | After we woke , he would take us on to the bigger islands , known as the Big Bush ’ . |
24 | A ‘ cross theology ’ , not on its own , let me add , but central to our preaching , will take us back to the central verity of our faith . |
25 | That really did take us back to the good old days . |
26 | In the last analysis the 67 12s. 9d. would stand revealed ; the pen would be taken out of his fingers just before he signed across the excise stamp ; gentle hands would conduct him back to the comfortable shabby gloom of Flat 4 , 86 Leominster Gardens . |
27 | The fact that parts of Poland were virtually indistinguishable from parts of Germany in terms of social complexity , levels of absolute poverty and economic success , that the Polish szlachta and the German Junker had more in common with each other than they did with either Berliners or Warsawians , that the average Polish and German smallholders and peasants had more in common with each other than they did with their social betters and political masters — all this meant nothing , except perhaps to make the Germans more convinced that the Poles would eventually drag them down to the Polish level of degradation . |
28 | Within the hour they were out into the countryside , following the track which would lead them down to the old Roman road . |
29 | I have another important foreign call coming through in a few minutes , so , if you 'll excuse me , I 'll hand you over to the Chief Accountant now . " |
30 | No , Caroline thought , as she let him lead her down to the ancient ground , no , it had n't . |