Example sentences of "[pers pn] and [verb] the [adj] [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Come with me and meet the other teachers .
2 The Hearthwares and Myrcans were greeted with friendliness and something like relief by the people they came upon — merchants in covered carts , farmers with flocks and herds , women bent under loads of firewood or water , children trailing behind them and eyeing the armoured figures on the big horses in wonder .
3 There are so many paths and old miners ' tracks around this area of Swaledale that you could spend years walking them and exploring the old workings and still not cover them all .
4 If they say black cards you say ‘ Good , so I will keep them and take the red cards away ’ .
5 The wind passed over them and rustled the bare branches of the trees and they still stood .
6 I 've had mine done twice , mine done twice , mm , the police were up the other day lying in ambush , and I 'd spotted them and phoned the local police station and said there 's men lurking in the bushes of are they policemen ? , she said yes madam , they 're policemen .
7 Jump onto the lift to your right , then on the second lift , and finally onto a platform ( watch out for the bare wires ) , climb down the site of this second building if you wish to collect a couple of records , but it 's quicker and safer to climb up the purple wall above you and climb the four ladders , grab the crate and jump onto the platform on your left , kill the mugger , climb the ladder and grab another crate , climb another ladder , then another kill the workman in the process , run across to the right , jump before you touch the wire and you should land on the next platform .
8 Mitch goes with you and takes the necessary shots , ’ he added firmly , glancing at Mitch .
9 Alright after you you perhaps took wagons down and put into that place where you and find the old ones in that room where your wagons are you see .
10 If you do n't have a number , ring the Coastguard who will be only too pleased to hear from you and give the relevant contacts .
11 This satisfies him and allows the other adventurers to run and escape automatically while the Champion is otherwise engaged .
12 Kolchinsky waited until Whitlock was seated before opening the file on the desk in front of him and outlining the sketchy details Philpott had received from their UNACO contact in Beirut earlier that morning .
13 In his vision God appeared before him and delivered the old promises made to Abraham and Isaac .
14 In " A " Ltd v " B " Ltd [ 1992 ] CLJ p263 H H Judge Davies QC , dealing with Official Referee 's Business , declined to follow Fryer 's case , purporting to distinguish it and holding the relevant passages of the Court of Appeal 's judgments to have been obiter dicta .
15 The island no longer gave men without much capital the economic opportunity sometimes to be found on a frontier , where land can be acquired cheaply by anyone prepared to make the great effort needed to clear it and plant the first crops .
16 Its teaching supplies the data which he must gather and interpret scientifically by tracing the general principles running through it and underlying the particular propositions it contains .
17 ‘ With the presidency of the European Community coming up , we believe Britain has a unique opportunity to renegotiate it and strip the corporatist elements out .
18 A trust has now been able to acquire it and take the first steps towards long-term restoration .
19 Critics of the DAS claimed that his first task should be to root out the corruption within it and halt the systematic abuses of human rights by its police officers .
20 So concentrate and then sort of pull back a bit from it and check the main bits and a good way is going through the sounds of each syllable .
21 The business of travel is vital to the economic survival of such countries , but as the numbers of tourists and travellers increase , a compromise has to be reached between the identity of the host country and the ‘ golden hordes ’ of tourists which threaten to swamp it and destroy the very characteristics which make it so attractive in the first place .
22 Set up a lab like mine and run the same experiments , and anyone should be able to come up with the same results , for they do not depend on excessively mysterious skills or tricks , and science is after all , in the words of its most passionately admiring philosophers , public knowledge .
23 ‘ Now we have to put that behind us and get the two wins we need to be safe . ’
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