Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] to take a [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | They are well-endowed with pockets : two zipped at the back ( giving double thickness to the seat ) , one of which has a side opening to take a map but too narrow for an OS map . |
2 | It was perfectly respectful , but suggested he found the clergy slow to take a point . |
3 | But the players were singing in it afterwards and Dowie managed to take a tenner off Bingham ; he had bet the manager he would score a goal . |
4 | Hungary appeared to take a step in the right direction when its rulers voted to transmute the old Hungarian Socialist Workers ' Party into a new , reformist-led Socialist Party — and in effect divorced the party from the state . |
5 | That priest trying to take a curse off that I 've heard a lot of excuses , half are bloody mad . |
6 | Drivers had to take a library of documents , including copies of invoices , details about loads carried and transit forms to be stamped at each border crossing . |
7 | He sacked Terry Butcher as manager last January after the former England defender refused to take a cut in his £250,000 salary . |
8 | Senior management failed to take a lead in clarifying the role of the Beacon in the department 's services to under fives . |
9 | ‘ Terry Yorath has to take a lot of credit . |
10 | well all other sport has to take a back seat this week … there 's only game to follow that 's racing … only one place to be Cheltenham … and Central South is here racing gold … |
11 | Someone from the Vienna art gallery arrived to take a death mask , and crowds of people were soon queuing to view the body , which was laid on a bier in a black suit with a cowl over its head . |
12 | Theology began to take a direction that Pius XII found uncomfortable . |
13 | The Chernobyl visit was just one of many reasons why the inquiry was still running when even the conscientious Barnes decided to take a summer break . |
14 | As more companies attempt to take a bite at this particular cake , the market becomes increasingly fragmented and it is very difficult indeed to achieve strong enough support for any particular design though each has its own supporters . |
15 | And , it 's only if this committee decides to take a hand in pushing environmental issues forward , that they will actually come about , except , almost by accident . |
16 | She said the salesmen refused to take a cheque so she handed over £30 deposit and the salesmen left . |
17 | Now a new invention , the Watsonlinc meter , will save precious time for electricians who , at present , have to access cable ends to take a reading . |
18 | The animal which is learning does not operate like an idiot photographer attempting to take a snap of everything . |
19 | My all-time favourite remark was made by a visiting Chesterfield supporter who watched silently as his team prepared to take a penalty in the dying seconds of a game at Barnsley which would have given them the draw . |
20 | Your share price seemed to take a bit of a knock the other day when Roy made some comments about referring media conglomerates to the Monopolies and Mergers Commission . |
21 | It s going to take a bit of time for the factories to dole us out some more . |
22 | Indeed , I am not sure what the correlation would be between formal attainments and the right qualities needed to take a degree in poetry . |
23 | As the coats separate to take a flight of stairs each , there 's a screech of tyres round the corner and a big old-style Granada lurches to a halt behind them . |
24 | King 's Park donned its best festive garb for the occasion and , self-indulgent though it appeared in the face of widespread township violence and the ANC 's call for a two-day national strike , white South Africa decided to take a break from its myriad woes . |
25 | My wife wished to take a photograph of me leaning against it from uphill and I have to report that the stone proved not to be immovable and now rests at the bottom of the slope . |
26 | After the leak of the Interfor Report , counsel for the victims , families attempted to take a deposition from Aviv but Shaughnessy moved to quash the subpoena on the grounds that Aviv 's work was protected from discovery by the so-called attorney work-product doctrine . |
27 | ‘ Sometimes your beliefs have to take a back seat in your life , otherwise they become obsessions to the exclusion of all else . ’ |
28 | Joe came to take a look . |
29 | Finally , if a local authority wishes to take a child into care , and perhaps assume custody , there are a series of legal rules which specify the grounds for such an action . |
30 | ‘ Dysart had to take a telephone call halfway through their meal . |