Example sentences of "[adv] [coord] [verb] i [prep] " in BNC.

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1 If you would like to know more about this ‘ Financial Health Check ’ write to me at the address below or call me on 0204 31627 .
2 There were no brakes , and if I had stumbled , then the bar that ran between the shafts behind me would have caught me in the back and either dragged me along or knocked me to the ground .
3 She leaned in and pecked me on the lips .
4 One Saturday a woman came in and took me to a big room where there was another woman with two children .
5 If Samoa , Mount Silisili and yesterday were indeed somewhere out there , I would have to take their presence on trust : I doubt if the visibility was more than five miles , and less as the squalls rolled in and drenched me in my eyrie .
6 I was getting caught up in the rat race and thin round the edges spiritually , when the Lord stepped in and reminded me of a promise He made before we left Kent .
7 h he 's got a , he 's coming down from Edinburgh and he wants to call in and see me about something and I do n't know what because I 've only spoken to his secretary .
8 So I started to get people to come in and ask me to specifically teach them stuff that was on my records .
9 ‘ Sit down and tell me about it . ’
10 One evening , when his golf match had been cancelled , he decided to drive down and collect me from the river .
11 I had not before realised that my canoe had been following me but I soon felt it as the point hit my back and then went down underneath me , dragging me down and sandwiching me between the canoe and the tree .
12 He follows me down and holds me in his arms .
13 Up and up we went and when I could walk no longer he lay me down and covered me with kisses and love bites .
14 Could you come down and see me in my office , please , Dorothy ? ’
15 Andy yelled , throwing the keys down and grabbing me by the collar and slamming me back against the side of the Landie .
16 The serjeant-at-arms , hidden behind the guard of his conical helmet , dragged me down and pushed me into a chamber where a candle glowed in the darkness .
17 ‘ I do n't want any kid coming along and beating me in my twilight years .
18 S'pose they take me down an' put me in a line-up .
19 [ She ] … will not interpret my sharing of my pain as an assault , she will not turn away or urge me to be strong , or murmur some expression of sympathy or swallow hard because there is , finally , nothing to say to someone who is beyond comfort though not beyond caring .
20 ‘ Busy , ’ he replied , and while she bit down a reply of , ‘ That should keep you out of mischief , ’ Lubor went on to disappoint her some more , when he added , ‘ Mr Gajdusek has gone away and left me with very much work . ’
21 ‘ If I pose for a photograph will you all go away and leave me to some peace and quiet ? ’
22 Why do n't you go away and leave me to it ? ’
23 Good , he thought , if I really work on her she 'll go away and leave me to it .
24 I was bleeding from a laceration on my scalp and was so drunk that I had no recollection of what had happened ; a Sergeant quizzed me closely and seeing that I was incapable of speech , took me downstairs and put me into an ambulance .
25 And with that he bent over and lifted me to my feet and told me to be off , which I did not need to be told twice to do .
26 She leaned over and kissed me on the cheek .
27 There was a scuffle ; the other policeman came over and kicked me in the stomach .
28 Music was very important to Norman and occasionally he would come over and invite me to concerts and films .
29 I was also warned to stay away from the tennis court if anyone was playing , but on one Saturday , a party was in progress and Miss Betty Farr , who must have been in her early twenties , spotted me trying not to be seen , called me over and plied me with cakes and lemonade .
30 He beckons me over and introduces me to Maggie .
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