Example sentences of "[vb base] [pers pn] [vb infin] that [noun] " in BNC.

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1 our age who 's saved up , er how d' ya qualify that price with today 's prices , cos every pound you save then , is er , is worth nowt today is it ?
2 Jo , where d' ya get that bag from ?
3 Well now what d' you think that name would mean ?
4 ‘ Where d' you learn that stuff ? ’
5 I forgot er I have n't watched the television at all and I forgot to record what d' you call that thing ? with the devil in it ?
6 D' you remember that time that that fat boy said , save your seat you bloody cow , sit in it .
7 " D' you know that Miss Lavant ?
8 Yeah well let me change that bit over .
9 Let me telephone that policeman you work for .
10 Let me move that chest .
11 Let me do that Mum .
12 You let me read that story you wrote for your class magazine : The Dragon 's Mouth .
13 Let me put that question to the hundred women here , are you looking forward to Christmas ?
14 So let me put that vote to the hundred , do you think every woman has a right to have a child , or to try to have a child ?
15 Let me find that letter first , ’ said Vic , riffling blindly through the papers in his Pending-tray , playing for time .
16 which I shall not attempt to conceal from you , but before I come down to the details let me say that Darwinism occupies such a central position in evolutionary biology — in biology as a whole , not just in evolutionary biology but in the whole of biology — that any important , new idea in biology has to be , to some extent , judged by its compatibility with , or its contradictions of , the Darwinian position .
17 Let me try that hair band on .
18 Let me take that man 's place , please . ’
19 Well let me see that stammer .
20 Let her drink that tea !
21 Let her remember that night too !
22 They let her keep that part of herself , though much else changed .
23 I let him sleep that night — and succeeding nights — with Montaine … .
24 If , however , he believes in the right to a free and independent trade union , let him grant that right to the employees at the Government communications headquarters , who have been denied it for the past eight years .
25 I let him have that bike . ’
26 Let it stay that way . ’
27 Let us fulfil that purpose , not for own advantage , but out of our duty to the people of our country and the people of our world .
28 Let us assume that DHA 1 does that and its capital charge reduces from £2.2m to £2.0m .
29 But let us regard that stage as over , there was a gesture to be made , and you have made it , and I am grateful !
30 Again , from our vantage point , we know that each is suited to a particular kind of flight and life style ; but let us ignore that fact , and continue with the primitive analysis .
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