Example sentences of "[verb] [pers pn] [prep] a [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | And it stops you having to hit them with a brick . |
2 | Defoe in 1730 had considered a poor man in constant work could earn from 4s to 5s ( 20-25p ) a week , " which will barely purchase bread and cheese and clothes for his family , so that if he falls sick or dies his wife and children infallibly come to the parish for relief , who allow them a small pittance or confine them in a workhouse " . |
3 | ‘ And they play the pipes , just as the Arab plays them with a bag holding air , ’ I added . |
4 | Wash and dry the leaves and tear them into a salad bowl . |
5 | You used to have to rub all your clothes and on this rub board or get a little brush and and scrub the s collar and your cuffs and then in the salt water and get all them in and then you used to have to ponch them with a ponch or a dolly peg , what used to go round like that you see . |
6 | Rather than sending the children out when the adults want to talk , it may be that a neighbour could make sure to include them in an outing to give the child time to talk to them . |
7 | He lowered me into a chair at the foot of the stairs and stood above me critically . |
8 | They are then invited to try and throw them in a basket one at a time without looking at the value . |
9 | Tell him that a young lady who has read his story with interest and affection offers them as a gift . |
10 | Through George Wigg I became reasonably close to Richard Crossman who consulted me on a number of occasions — I have already described the Spectator libel case — but who , I must confess , turned out to be a disappointment to me , since the reputation he had earned for more than occasional unreliability I found to be entirely justified . |
11 | According to Nicholas Clee , from the bookseller J Whitaker and Sons in London , any writer planning to embark on such a book would be advised to create a family living in rural bliss with a gaggle of children then land them in a crisis , preferably involving the central character in an affair with an older/younger man/woman . |
12 | It was ludicrous to see them as a threat to security . |
13 | Practical theories and theoretized practice meet somewhere in the middle , and it may be more fruitful to see them as a continuum than as a dichotomy . |
14 | First , bankers are so used to thinking of intangibles as chiefly useful for pricing takeovers and then minimising taxes after them ( intangibles can be amortised for tax purposes ) that they have been slow to see them as a way of wooing investors . |
15 | Princesse Mathilde came to see them for a weekend . |
16 | ‘ I went over to see them in a tea dance one Friday and they said it was like they were being auditioned . |
17 | Right , as soon as we 've done this then we 'll have to go and have a , you can have a bath and mummy can have a shower because I 've got a lady coming to see me about a job . |
18 | Elizabeth : Elizabeth , a young woman who lives with her sister in a remote and primitive cottage in the Welsh mountains , came to see me about an infestation of scabies . |
19 | I 've been a candidate before , I do n't like to do things badly , since coming into politics I do n't think I have done things badly , I do n't want to fail you and I do n't want you to see me as a failure . |
20 | You 're about as pleased to see me as a peasant is to meet the tax-gatherer ! ’ |
21 | The Jungle Book was not mentioned again by any of them , as if they were n't ready to see me as an actor but preferred me in my old role as a useless boy . |
22 | Sometime around the middle of the week , Dr MacLennan was allowed to see me for a while , after Diggs overruled my father 's refusal to have me medically inspected by anybody else but him . |
23 | Then , when they came in , he came up to see me for a bit . ’ |
24 | Come to see me in a fortnight . |
25 | Modernization eventually takes away children 's ability to earn and turns them into a cost as they need education to earn as adults . |
26 | The EC can neither reverse current trends nor bring them to a halt . |
27 | They were using me as a guinea-pig to investigate the hourly variation in mental efficiency of those with irregular sleeping patterns , such as airline pilots or globe-trotting diplomats . |
28 | ‘ Damn it , Kathleen , do n't you go using me as a shield . |
29 | ‘ So you were using me as a stud , min kaere . |
30 | ‘ I am not the bravest of men , I 'll be honest I did not like Sir Ralph using me as a page boy but he distrusted the others . ’ |