Example sentences of "[vb mod] [verb] [pers pn] back to the " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ 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 . |
2 | Which must bring us back to the UK , which had dreadful years in 1991 and 1992 and which may not be much better in 1993 . |
3 | If the lace carriage is at the right and you need to knit with the main carriage , you must slide it back to the left . |
4 | You must drive me back to the airport . |
5 | If that is allowed you must get it back to the interviewer as soon as possible . |
6 | Where the application is made to the district judge he may , if in doubt as to the proper order to be made , refer the application to the judge forthwith or at the next convenient opportunity , and the judge may hear the application and make such order as may be just or may refer it back to the district judge with directions . |
7 | For Harrison to tell them now that logging should end would be political suicide : ‘ Vote for me : I 'll send you back to the stone age ! ’ |
8 | I 'LL SEND YOU BACK TO THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY |
9 | I said to her , if you 're not careful I 'll send you back to the chocolate factory . |
10 | 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 . ’ |
11 | All right , I 'll leave her here until she comes to , then we 'll take her back to the camp . ’ |
12 | ‘ I 'll take him back to the school , Headmaster , ’ she said . |
13 | ‘ It 'll be shock ; we 'll take him back to the centre with us . ’ |
14 | About fifteen minutes later Sergeant Briggs entered Jane 's room , we 'll take him back to the station and tomorrow we 'll go around and ask a few questions . |
15 | The car 's only just been serviced so I 'll take it back to the garage . |
16 | I 'll get it back to the place . |
17 | ‘ Perhaps you could take her back to the auberge ? ’ |
18 | 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 . |
19 | Some may take you back to the nursery . |
20 | I may take you back to the Bab el Khalk and ask you . ’ |
21 | Up my elbow and er anyway put it used to take it back to the shop and er well I was still inside the shop , down to a certain place in the shop and put it on a on a stand and then there 'd be a on that stand , beside the bucket , was a a box of not Lux not Lux soap but er yellow soap . |
22 | 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 . |
23 | What , Mo asked , would tempt her back to the polling booths ? |
24 | At Bethel , the place of the vision of the stairway to heaven , God promised him that he would be with him , that he would keep him wherever he went , that he would bring him back to the Land , and would not leave him . |
25 | The conductor would send me round to the front with my fishing box , the driver would send me back to the conductor 's end and so it went on . |
26 | It would be late at night , she would have her back to the door and , when brushing her teeth , Elinor went into a kind of trance . |
27 | He drove a wide circle out of the car park towards the slip-road that would take him back to the dual carriageway . |
28 | The Scots , their mission completed , packed coffers and chests and prepared to leave , intending to go under safe conduct to Yarmouth where their ships would take them back to the Port of Leith in Edinburgh . |
29 | He stopped and said he would take me back to the Hall . |
30 | Er we at the County Council think that to delete that Greater York erm dimension would take us back to the realms of uncertainty , past uncertainty , in the Greater York area , we 're therefore proceeding with a Greater York dimension in policy H One at none thousand seven hundred dwellings , which equates to hundred percent migration . |