Example sentences of "[verb] i [vb infin] to " in BNC.
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1 | But no one can make me talk to you . |
2 | ‘ It 'll make me want to be a Brownie even more ! ’ |
3 | ‘ These are the songs I grew up listening to , ’ she says , ‘ they are the songs that made me want to be a singer . ’ |
4 | He taught me the fundamentals of the job … unsparingly … he channelled my discontent and made me want to be an actor . |
5 | ‘ They never made me go to auditions — it was just something that came up . |
6 | About three months before I finally , I was husband made me go to the doctor or go to the doctors for me and that 's when I realized it was depression I did n't know anything about it then . |
7 | Mama made me go to school , but I crept back home just before noon . |
8 | More than anything else it was the two essays Camus wrote evoking ‘ the great free love of nature and the sea ’ at Tipasa that made me come to Algeria . |
9 | Some of the love passages made me cry to the astonishment of John who came in with the coals . |
10 | ‘ You made me rise to that bait , did n't you ? ’ |
11 | Worst of all , would the option to ignore the incident make me party to an action I abhor ? |
12 | ‘ But the manager Allan Clarke was only keeping his word when he let me go to Portsmouth . |
13 | And often , as I sat writing such poems that helped me cling to the last shreds of my many identities , I would suddenly sense that you were indeed approaching . |
14 | Of course , I had no idea whether these ladies were right or wrong , but the revelation of fragments of past lives helped me come to terms with my true nature , and to understand why I had been troubled in the past . |
15 | The experience was a defining period in her life , one which ‘ really gave me a lotta confidence , and helped me come to terms with my womanhood ’ . |
16 | Added the keyboard-playing star : ‘ Raymond , my close friends and my family helped me come to terms with my depression . |
17 | Let me relate to you a fable . |
18 | ‘ Fellow countrypersons , let me present to you Lord Chatwin of Spignel Meu , guardian of our heritage — Tumbleweed . ’ |
19 | And so , first of all , let me present to you the battlefield . |
20 | Let me tend to your arm . ’ |
21 | ‘ Let me explain to all of you why this case is so different , ’ Tanner continued , hunching his huge shoulders , his big hands spread before him on the table . |
22 | Let me sing to you , then . |
23 | ‘ Let me speak to Mr Cement here . ’ |
24 | Brother , let me speak to you . |
25 | But since , so jump upon this bloody question , you from the Polack wars , and you from England , are here arrived , give order that these bodies high on a stage be placed to the view ; and let me speak to the yet unknowing world how these things came about : so shall you hear of carnal , bloody and unnatural acts , of accidental judgments , casual slaughters , of deaths put on by cunning and forced cause , and , in this upshot , purposes mistook fallen on the inventors ' heads : all this can I truly deliver . |
26 | ’ Let me speak to her . |
27 | ‘ Please let me speak to Kevin . ’ |
28 | ‘ Let me speak to her . |
29 | Well let me speak to my brother first but erm give Geoff a call , I know that he 's looking for something . |
30 | Let me suggest to my hon. and learned Friend the Minister that perhaps the time has come to stop acting as an honest broker between victim and aggressor . |