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

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1 The city council , responsible for housing people with Aids , has taken her off the streets and put her in a room in a single-occupancy hotel .
2 Leicester 3 Sunderland 2 ONCE again , Sunderland were unable to transfer the marvellous form which has taken them to the FA Cup final at Wembley into their league matches .
3 Sedgefield Racers make the long trip to Chiltern tonight looking to maintain an end of season run that has taken them to the fringes of the play-off chase .
4 Two businessmen have just completed an epic journey which has taken them across the English Channel in a microlight aircraft .
5 Their hazardous journey has taken them over the mountains between Metkovic in Croatia to Zenica in Bosnia .
6 His research has taken him through the alpine and arid zones of Australia ; botanical history is one of his many interests , and he specialises in the ‘ Compositae ’ family .
7 His American tour kicked off on day one at the Tournament of Champions in Southern California and has taken him to the two major Pro-Ams — the Bob Hope and the Crosby ( aforementioned Pebble Beach National Pro-Am ) — a trio of Florida events — Doral , the Honda Classic and the Players ' Championship — as well as The Masters , the Colonial , the Memorial , the season-ending Nabisco Championship and a slew of less-hallowed events in between .
8 Nicholson 's new boy Adrian Maguire has thirty four winners already … but a double from Richard Dunwoody has taken him into the twenties
9 The Renaissance was a rebirth of the Alexandrian-Roman spirit , and it has taken us on the same path .
10 IT is probably unwise to record in print that a man who is not your lawfully wedded husband has taken you to the heights of unbridled rapture .
11 ‘ In charge of ’ means that once a person takes a vehicle on a road or public place he normally remains in charge of that vehicle until he has taken it off the road or public place again .
12 ‘ The Mirror has taken it from the limited audience it has had right out into the open .
13 All right , I 'll put a sling on that arm , and if the pain gets worse you must promise to take yourself to the hospital . ’
14 As an agriculturist he has to take him in the garden for practical training .
15 All this is so rich , heady and fast-moving that the viewer has to take it on the narrator 's trust .
16 As the rebels , sword in hand , ran after the retreating cavalry , sonic of the royal infantry stood their ground and tried to take them in the flank but the heavy rain had left most of their cartridges too damp to fire and the frustrated musketeers thereupon also took to their heels .
17 And again in abbreviated form that , I just want to take you through the molecular basis for endotoxin action .
18 I want to take you through the thinking that led me to that conclusion , and then to concentrate on one of the keys to securing that future — the whole question of advancing the cause of children 's books .
19 Oh we 're not , we do n't need to take it till the next one .
20 It can from , in situations where the employer wants to take one on the life of the employee .
21 He wants to take her into the Royal Infirmary for tests . ’
22 I asked her , " Would you mind if I have a boyfriend ? " and she said " It depends " and I said " What if I said somebody wanted to take me to the pictures ? " and it was , " If a boy wants to take you to the pictures , he 's only alter one thing .
23 Tell her you 've come to take her to the ol the pensioners ' club on her , on your bike .
24 The probationers told him to remember that every minute he was getting a little better , and Ward Sister told him not to make any effort , and not to try to take anything by the mouth .
25 I promised to see that Constanza would get to Brussels on time , and he promised to take me behind the scenes of the art world .
26 I see let take it from the other end , why did you have to take the insertion of the contingency fund of the estimates
27 They 'd taken her from the police cells after two days .
28 She 'd taken him from the town and the friends that he knew and she 'd brought him to this great , dusty mausoleum of a place where he did n't even like to run around because the echo of his footsteps sounded too much like someone faceless who was following too close .
29 In two long strides , Guy abandoned his leaning position by the fireplace and came to take her by the shoulders , shaking her roughly .
30 Eventually a man from the tower arrived , and a little bus came to take us to the aircraft .
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