Example sentences of "take us [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Gon na take us down The Square .
2 A man was unfurling a sail on one of the feluccas , and we ran along the bank and asked him if he would take us across the river .
3 But there is reason to think that our senses do not take us to the heart of things .
4 Tragically the story of God 's wrestling match makes all too good sense , and a tale which bears so clearly the marks of its primitive beginnings can take us to the very summit of Calvary , and deep into the still broken heart of God .
5 The driver would take us to the police .
6 ‘ You can take us to the graves , Sir James ? ’
7 We continue now along the Rua da Carreira , past the many small restaurants and bread and cake shops until we come to a street on the right called Rua do Quebra Costas which will take us to the English Church , hidden behind a high wall in a large garden .
8 Not only does he take us to the site but he drives straight through the crowd , lights blazing , to the backstage area .
9 For Peirce , statistical sampling is the fundamental kind of ampliative inference , and for this he derives its ‘ validity ’ from his understanding of reality — its repeated use will take us to the truth in the long run .
10 Peirce could probably allow the same : his position rests upon the belief that there is a logical guarantee that induction will take us to the truth in the long run , but that our confidence in the short-run efficacy of the method is simply an ‘ acritical ’ commonsense certainty which may be susceptible to scientific explanation .
11 ‘ After the coronation they 'll take us to the palace for the night .
12 ‘ That will take us to the cities where we can buy more .
13 I have a boat ready and it will take us to the Delta .
14 I tell you another year of feasibility studies will take us to the point of no return .
15 I myself would I am sure hereafter regret not visiting this part of V. D. L. , and under all circumstances I have agreed with Lady Franklin to wait one week longer after which to return if the wind should not come round to the eastward or northeast , either of these winds would take us to the desired place in a few hours .
16 An account of the decline of partisan and religious strife , by contrast , would take us past the Hanoverian Succession — indeed , perhaps a long way past it .
17 Frank will now take us through the , the net savings of twenty million on redundancies .
18 is er , Robert you can come up and take us through the four steps of selling .
19 Nick can you take us through the six on the left see if you know them already .
20 Only magazines as risky as Mediterraneans can take us into the sort of culture where the same writer can be both Keats and Dylan .
21 Oh he could take us into the two thousand .
22 The European Commission have agreed an action programme that will take us into the next century and this is despite the attitude of the present U K government .
23 ‘ In addition to doublle-digit growth for use in bottling , I can see a market for 50-70kta of polyethylene terephthalate in Europe in these new applications by 1990 , ’ says Bruce , ‘ And as a successful outcome of the research we are doing to produce materials of high-temperature resistance [ which would take us into the hot-fill container market ] and materials of improved gas barrier properties could add considerably to that . ’
24 I thought of the far nurseries of the stars and how many days ' sail through the thin seas of hydrogen would take us beyond the space lamps and the burial grounds of the stars .
25 PC /k is a closure principle because it says that a move from something known to something known to be implied by it does not take us outside the closed area of knowledge . )
26 So , from Tuesday through to Thursday , he 'll take us from the Blackhills of Dakota , through Dances with Wolves country to the scene of Custer 's legendary last stand .
27 erm the the order which one , one I concern , maybe we can discuss if to , if , if the defendants were prepared to undertake to erm provide any as to instruct within twenty eight days from today , the matter should be list on and this convention on a Friday , Friday in about two or two and a half month 's time from now , which will take us in the next term , I , I beg a suggestion
28 Oakeshott examines the most important modes of experience , which he identifies as science , history , and practice , in order to show how their methods are partial and defective and therefore do not take us nearer the overall coherence of the world of experience which it is the objective of philosophy to pursue .
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