Example sentences of "take [adv prt] the whole " in BNC.

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1 Takes out the whole aim of the play .
2 If she can fight off that medication , she 'll take on the whole world . ’
3 We ca n't take on the whole French colonial army — we must escape .
4 ‘ You think I 'll take over the whole show , do n't you ? ’ accused Mountbatten .
5 I have seen some very attractively variegated mint which I would like to grow in the flower border , but my mother says it will take over the whole garden .
6 ‘ Get in and socialise with the family , ’ Peter Shearer told Mr and Mrs M. You re not just teaching one child , you 're taking on the whole family , ’ this being a family of fifteen children , some with social and behavioural problems , and eight still of school age .
7 It looked as if he was taking on the whole KGB .
8 So the Foreign Office turned a bland eye — nobody was exactly complaining out loud — and we took on the whole Sims organisation as a going concern .
9 The great drive for respectability , which was led by the trade papers and various film industry organizations , really took over the whole publicity campaign and again became almost a defining characteristic of British and especially American cinema .
10 Closed doors stopped the fire taking over the whole building in Borough Road .
11 In their progress they took up the whole width of the footpath .
12 ‘ We listened to Joe Lewis , In The Mood , that sort of thing and took up the whole floor for dancing — they hardly move around now .
13 Some of us remember the old days when the NI was gloriously unpredictable — one month a short story taking up the whole magazine , the next a cartoon issue and then a bit later a fold-out world map .
14 I have here a copy of the committee which was formed that night , and also a copy of the minutes , I 'll give each Councillor one , and then they can read it at their leisure , instead of me taking up the whole meeting .
15 But there are erm others who , for whom teaching is the major aspect and the major important role that they perceive for themselves erm but there is always a balance and on balance , taken over the whole system , I should think that most people spend fifty or sixty per cent of their time on research .
16 I mean , I 'm n this is no criticism because you , you could n't er , you 'd have taken up the whole hour if you 'd included examples .
17 They take on the whole world , but they 've got no patterns with which to deal with all that experience. ,
18 Reportedly it wanted a leg up on the business to reduce its development time and eventually aimed to take over the whole project .
19 In fact , as I write I realize that the whole mess of Primavera must be handed over to you — TAKE OVER THE WHOLE BLOODY THING and get this tremendous weight off my shoulders — change and edit the costumes , but not too much , as they are designed so as not to interfere with the movement of the ballet , as it includes curling up into small balls , rolling , lying etc .
20 Half of the extra cash will be forthcoming only if projects of sufficient quality to take up the whole £2 million come in by the next deadline for grants on 1 April .
21 Relevant state benefits for which the plaintiff must give credit should still be estimated and deducted when fixing the amount to be paid into court before a certificate is received as the plaintiff will be entitled to take out the whole amount in court and the defendant remains liable to reimburse the Secretary of State .
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