Example sentences of "[adv] [verb] [pers pn] [adv prt] to the " in BNC.

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1 You only let it out to the girls because you got a shock when they said they 'd seen .
2 Dress your hair in the way I intended , put on my pearl necklace and — ’ Anne drew off her gold ring and carelessly dropped it on to the coverlet ‘ — my wedding-ring .
3 ‘ Well , we 're not polite society , lad , so tip it on to the grass and we 'll pretend we 're not locking .
4 If we are looking for advice on a particular situation which affects us then impartiality of the second type is particularly important ; for instance , the judge who assesses the relevant facts and selects the relevant moral or legal rules must not be someone who has something to gain or lose by the outcome , although this presupposes the correctness of the rules to be applied and so takes us back to the impartiality normally associated with legislators , which is a matter of their involvement in determining rules which are not only universalisable but are actually to be universalised , at least within a given community , and to their impartiality in the third sense namely the adequacy of the consideration given to the various relevant considerations .
5 At this point the whole argument not only takes us back to the eighteenth-century speculations about poetry versus reason , but begins to tie in with recent neurological discoveries concerning the workings of the two halves of the human brain which have been derived from experimentally induced conditions of aphasia .
6 Theodora gently steered him back to the house and set him in a deckchair on the south-facing terrace .
7 ‘ You 'd better take us up to the refrigerator factory , ’ Gary said .
8 Erm , thank goodness for er modern technology I got them please do n't , do n't all fax them up to the department , er these faxes are very hard to read
9 In the latest they were called to the home of a man in his early 20s in Frenchgate , Richmond , but found they needed more equipment so took him back to the Richmond Fire Station and released the cuffs with a hacksaw and vice .
10 I can only put it down to the strong classical emphasis which prevails in the courses offered in the UK , although many of the university drama courses in the USA do stage Shakespeare and the European classical authors .
11 The consumer is often not even aware what the bill is , and if he or she is , merely posts it off to the company to pay .
12 So taken it down to the tills at the front , cos they move quicker
13 Gurney , who scored 205 goals in his fourteen years with Sunderland , worked out a way of drawing the centre-half with him while collecting the ball from the wing then suddenly laying it back to the centre for another forward .
14 This strategy marks a structure of repetition in Sartre 's text : each time he poses the question of how there can be totalization of History without a totalizer , he retreats to a more limited example whose unity is already evident , but which in the end only brings him back to the original question again .
15 This rightly brings us back to the subject of worship rather than evangelism .
16 It spots already compressed files ( ZIP and ARJ and the like , as well as LZH compressed TIF files and so forth ) and just passes them through to the hard disk unaltered .
17 But can I just refer you back to the words of P B G three where it says quite clearly in paragraph thirty three .
18 I 'd like to just bring you back to the first question you asked , which was how do you define sexual harassment .
19 Can I just bring you back to the item before us , which is ‘ This Common Inheritance ’ , and ask you to endorse the sub-committees suggestions , i.e. repeat them , as comments from the health committee , with the additions from the vice-chair on environmental protection agency .
20 ‘ I was very lethargic but I just put it down to the first months of my pregnancy .
21 We just clear them on to the runway and tell them what other traffic we expect .
22 I mean I did not need to stay on at school or get my B.A. at Strathclyde to know when not to F or C. Fuck-me shoes , I just handed them back to the saleslady with as much dignity as I could muster and says , thanks but no thanks , I do n't know when I 'd ever have the occasion to werr them .
23 Tell you what erm when we get into you can just drop me down to the greengrocer near the church because I 'm out of erm spring onions and if I wanted to add up to that bit of salad that we 've got
24 Ca n't you just take me back to the life your friends stole me from ? ’
25 I 'll just take them back to the stall then .
26 I thought I 'd just take them down to the tip , but when we had half a bucket full I thought I 'd better phone the police
27 ‘ I might just take it out to the kitchen and pour another one , if you do n't mind .
28 So Just just so we 're absolutely certain then , sorry if I if I can just take you back to the the l the areas spelt out in paragraph one one .
29 ‘ Bring one out , ’ he said , watching as the tall man struggled with it , finally dropping it on to the deck .
30 You ca n't just leave it up to the police , or to someone else — and ignoring it wo n't make it go away .
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