Example sentences of "[vb past] [prep] [verb] [pers pn] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 We got ta put them in the deep fat fryer .
2 He had been ‘ much pleased ’ with the suggestion , ‘ but was deterr 'd from improving it by the greatness of the subject …
3 especially when it came to humping it into the van the A L O was nowhere to be found .
4 And diamonds were a man 's best friend when it came to making it with the opposite sex .
5 OPPONENTS of Mr Frank Field , the Labour MP for Birkenhead , believe they succeeded in deselecting him at the secret ballot held last Tuesday .
6 Cornered , he resorted to patting her on the shoulder , while across his face flitted the craven smile of a man dealing with an unpredictable pet that yet might turn on him .
7 Dozzell said : ‘ I thought about wearing it for the last few minutes , but I did n't think it would go down too well .
8 I thought about posting it to the club as my sign of protest .
9 He met two artists , husband and wife , ‘ awfully sweet , she has a bold yet subtle and exotic sense of colour ’ , and thought of trying her for the costumes ; he had already got another artist to try and ‘ you never saw such revue in all your life ’ .
10 She thought of ringing him on the off chance of catching him at the flat , but shelved the possibility as unlikely .
11 I was not desperate to make money at that time , rather I thought of helping her with the commission she would take .
12 When my colleague had said that , with me sitting right beside him , I felt like punching him in the face ; it was that kind of attitude that any campaign would have to fight .
13 She felt like throwing it across the room but managed to control herself .
14 Mungo felt like patting him on the back to show him that they sympathized , but the moment passed , and anyway Mr Zamoyski might not have understood .
15 Wycliffe felt like patting him on the head , but he thanked him and saw him off with his samples , then he went back to his little office and sat staring at the wall .
16 I felt like hitting him on the back of the head with a rock .
17 The other day , in America , the driver of my car said : ‘ I do n't know how you can leave her , ’ and I felt like smacking him in the face .
18 My mother insisted on accompanying me to the tailor to ensure that I got something sensible .
19 You were the one who refused to go away , the one who insisted on trailing me along the road .
20 He cried for put him on the bed , could n't do no college work so I just went to bed and left him .
21 She finished breathlessly , and Greg refrained from enlightening her on the history of New Zealand .
22 ‘ I warned him time and again — he got sometimes so drunk they had tae carry him inside the cage — but what kin ye dae wie a man that wo n't listen ? ’
23 In one yesterday , an article by Islington Council leader Margaret Hodge ended by describing her as the leader of the Association of Local Authorities since 1093 .
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