Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb base] they [prep] the [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 I make them for the shops to sell , ’ she told Virginia .
2 I run the search room there , which means that erm people come into Pelham House , they usually meet me at a desk and the end of a telephone , and I put them onto the documents that they want to look at and I make sure that they 're ordered up from where they 're kept in one of the various repositories and strong rooms that we 've got .
3 That 's right , yes , I run the Search Room there , which means that erm people come in to Pelham House , they usually meet me at a desk on the end of a telephone and I put them onto the documents that they want to look at and I make sure they 're ordered up from where they 're kept in one of the various repositories and strongrooms that we 've got , and then I produce them for them and erm if they need any help reading them and so on I give them that .
4 I put them on the chairs , here in front of the fire , to dry nut and the kitchen was like a steam-bath all winter . ’
5 No , no I scrape them from the plates into its own dish Greg come here let's have you having dinner come on .
6 He preferred outwork : " In a factory you confine them to the hours the master pleases , in the cottage they work very often 15 or 16 hours . "
7 Now you put them on the shelves , and I 'll check you . ’
8 You put them on the backs of the calendar card .
9 They would even dry quicker than if you put them over the clothes horse cos that 's what those slats are for .
10 And I must have been in a really funny mood , and I said yes we have it 's on the till and he went well I suggest you get them in the windows then !
11 And you thread them on the curtains through this little metal ring .
12 We 've got our single layer network as we know so we take all our inputs we push them through the decoders and we 've got our single layer after that .
13 " Normally they 're gone when we get to the office , but sometimes they 're still here , and sometimes we meet them in the evenings , if we 're working late .
14 Their influence was far more diffuse and elusive ; as one teacher put it , ‘ we keep them in the backs of our minds ’ .
15 They will give us exactly the colour we want , especially if we dovetail them with the bassoons and thus make use of the deep low notes of the second horn .
16 Writing of the work of Chardin , whose most profoundly moving paintings are revelations of how trivial , homely , everyday scenes and objects are transformed for us when we see them through the eyes of a great painter , Proust says , " Chardin has taught us that a pear is as living as a woman , a kitchen crock as beautiful as an emerald . "
17 and they 've I gave them to them and they put them on the hedges
18 I was only a lad , I was er a messenger boy on the loading deck and I used to have to go down to at Beskett and fetch parts for the planes and er plates , aluminium plates , to be normalized which was a treatment when they put them into the vats and I had to fetch the films as well , from the house that used to be a warehouse for films over in er in by the beacon , great bar !
19 And if they died , we us I helping my moni my Mother many at time , to wash them down , before they put them in the coffins .
20 Then they present them in the accounts as monthly expenses to non-existent scouts abroad , such as Seamus Kelly , a fictional talent-spotter in Ireland , or Henrik Andersson , an imaginary Scandinavian contact .
21 The assistants price the items as they stack them on the shelves , or when they are already on the shelves .
22 So where he is now , they really stretch them but they unwind them in the afternoons by games and and
23 And they carry them in the rubbers and put them in the mangers .
24 Well maybe they 've not been so they give them so long and then they cross them off the books do n't they ?
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