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

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1 My hon. Friend is a charming relative newcomer to this place and we are delighted that she is here , but if she had been here as long as I have — getting on for 18 years now — she would have heard me banging on about exactly that point .
2 From the smaller to the greater , the patterns always hold true , and the Factory has taught me to watch out for them and respect them .
3 I do n't want him to know we 've got divers aboard and I especially do n't want him to see me taking off with divers in the general direction of the Delos .
4 Shiona could n't have agreed more , but her tone was taunting as she told him , ‘ What a pity you 'll have to wait until tomorrow to see me led away in chains . ’
5 People have me in a little pocket of their minds in that role [ Ben Braddock ] and they do n't want to see me get out of it .
6 While Kāli fumbled , striking the flint against the steel , trying to produce a spark that was strong enough to light the little piece of cotton , they told me how pleased they were to see me working just like them .
7 And the only thing I need to ask you about is that bloody great , bloody great memo , I 've said it so I 'll say it again it 's pinned up in my old tutor 's room what do you want me to put down on the document for the record of achievement on attendance ?
8 Hope he does n't want me to traipse about with Lisa .
9 D' ya want me to go round to that school and beat the crap out of them ?
10 When I first came my husband did not want me to go out to work .
11 Do you want me to get up to , try and get up
12 ‘ I thought you 'd want me to get out of your sight — and stay out . ’
13 ‘ Me too , ’ I agreed , ‘ but my Mum says she do n't want me growing up like Sally Buckley . ’
14 ‘ Does he want me to stay here in an English prison ? ’
15 Fred handed over the old bull's-eye lantern he was carrying , and asked , ‘ D' you want me to come along with you , sir ? ’
16 ‘ D' you want me to come back with you tonight ? ’ he asked her .
17 ‘ Do you want me to come in with you ? ’
18 It amused me to think back to my life in London .
19 You ca n't make me go back with you .
20 My brother could make me cry just by lifting me on to a five-foot-high garden trellis and leaving me there , so I was hardly a miniature Chris Bonnington .
21 Easy path or not , a climb of over 4,000 feet every Monday morning would certainly make me phone in with a headache .
22 He 'd make me sleep with the kids , then he 'd make me come back to bed with him , in and out all night .
23 He might make me come back to London , and I could n't bear it .
24 How will you make me get out of your way when you know deep down that that 's the last thing you really want me to do ? ’
25 I am grateful to the hon. Member for Beaconsfield ( Mr. Smith ) for allowing me to intervene briefly in this debate .
26 Bless 'em all thank you as well to Radio Nottingham for allowing me to come in as part of my successful bid for Money Spinner .
27 ‘ Then , about a month later , he asked me to go up to Camp David while he and his family were using the facility .
28 Yeah eh she asked me to go over to John
29 Perhaps the toner fluid intoxicated her — there were over a hundred sheets to copy — or maybe it was the lack of air in the photocopying room , but after we had done and she had commented favourably on the comprehensive and detailed nature of the notes , she asked me to go out with her .
30 They asked me to go there for an interview , and from that they recommended a therapist who would see me at her home .
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