Example sentences of "[coord] [verb] us the [noun sg] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | When the guarantee is released , or you get the deposit back , you must help us to cancel the guarantee or give us the deposit . |
2 | When the guarantee is released , or you get the deposit back , you must help us to cancel the guarantee or give us the deposit . |
3 | When the guarantee is released , or you get the deposit back , you must help us to cancel the guarantee or give us the deposit . |
4 | When the guarantee is released , or you get the deposit back , you must help us to cancel the guarantee or give us the deposit . |
5 | Nor do we ask the poet to combine the roles of priest and sage , or to enlighten us with revelations , or teach us the morality on which we should base our lives . |
6 | er , I 'd believe in theory we could because the lease provides us or gives us the opportunity to do so , but we would not go against the wishes of the residence |
7 | and send us the cheque back . |
8 | Or just complete and send us the application form overleaf , and we shall send your membership card and pack within 28 days . |
9 | Or just complete and send us the application form overleaf , and we shall send your membership card and pack within 28 days . |
10 | Or just complete and send us the application form overleaf , and we shall send your membership card and pack within 28 days . |
11 | Diggs came and told us the day he broke out . ’ |
12 | You must take our hands and show us the way , like Mum did . |
13 | " God be merciful to us , " he said , " and bless us : and show us the light of His countenance . " |
14 | If the lord abbot agrees , I hope you will stay and give us the benefit of your judgement . |
15 | Show us what you want us to do and give us the strength to submit our will to yours . |
16 | And they used to come and give us the pattern , what the butler got to lay on the table ; the tea-service would be the same pattern as the tablecloth was . |
17 | ‘ Yes , I wish to leave , and I want you to come and show us the place where those two corpses were found . ’ |
18 | He broke the gun in half and showed us the cylinder filled with six red plastic capsules . |
19 | Reflecting on the new and indeed unlikely scenario Collie Curran said : ‘ PJ McGowan came in three years ago and showed us the way ahead . |
20 | Mum was always thrifty , and able to stretch pennies to shillings ; once she proudly opened an old tea-caddy ( then utilised as a savings-bank ) and showed us the amount then accumulated : an unbelievable total of ten pounds . |
21 | Sing to us now , some of your Latin , maybe , and give us the benefit of your great learning ! ’ |
22 | mystery and complexity — they interest us and give us the promise that we can delve to find out more about them |
23 | But nobody come back and give us the go-ahead to do it . |
24 | It 's not just the better the members that we 've got working in the Health Service , it 's about everybody in the room and everybody in the country who wants to use it and we 've got ta get it a bi a bit higher up on the agenda at this union and I hope Mick , that you can give us the confidence and give us the commitment , that that 's what we 're gon na get from this union . |
25 | Call us on o-four-one , three-three-two , seven thousand and tell us the gist of the story . |
26 | when he 's been there a little while perhaps he can come with all the authority of a Euro MP and tell us the answer to his own question er , the honourable member for Ashfield er referred back to the positioning of the European parliament er where it should meet , there are three sites . |
27 | ‘ Oh , go away and get us the coffee , ’ said Milton . |
28 | It was intended purely to acquaint us with a field of art historical research to which we had very limited access and to give us the opportunity of establishing a dialogue . |
29 | Its cooking partner was the Costard which was sold in the markets of Oxford from 1296 until the end of the seventeenth century and bequeathed us the word ‘ costermonger ’ — meaning someone who hawks fruit and vegetables in the street . |
30 | Golf Illustrated 's lengthy accounts states ‘ difficulty after difficulty had to be surmounted , not with ease ’ and tells us the course had previously been partly arable , partly waste and that one professional condemned the prospects of the course unless £10,000 were spent on it . ’ |