Example sentences of "[coord] [adv] take [pron] [adv prt] " in BNC.

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1 Or even take her over .
2 If we are looking for advice on a particular situation which affects us then impartiality of the second type is particularly important ; for instance , the judge who assesses the relevant facts and selects the relevant moral or legal rules must not be someone who has something to gain or lose by the outcome , although this presupposes the correctness of the rules to be applied and so takes us back to the impartiality normally associated with legislators , which is a matter of their involvement in determining rules which are not only universalisable but are actually to be universalised , at least within a given community , and to their impartiality in the third sense namely the adequacy of the consideration given to the various relevant considerations .
3 It would discourage profit and perhaps take us back to that nadir of Labour party policy when Shirley Williams was able to say with some pride that profit levels were the lowest they had been for years .
4 We 've owned the thing for two years and only taken it out that one time when it snowed . ’
5 Oh well he can run until then , then and just take it out to and leave it there .
6 About4 weeks ago I realised I had only put this in the hallway after the title season , and promptly took it down .
7 ‘ Good idea , ’ Dad replied with a twinkle in his eye : he knew why they were there because he went out and fetched them in and later took them back himself .
8 ‘ It took all the stacks up — tons and tons — and simply took 'em up like that off the ground and scattered them over the fields .
9 They took me to the hospital , and then took me back home .
10 Fred was jumpy while they were working together the next morning , so Arthur opened a bottle of Bollinger in their businesslike new office and then took him out to lunch .
11 I helped to milk the cows and then took them out to the field .
12 Here Cornelius fed the motor car with the best petrol that money could buy and then took himself up to the restaurant to join Tuppe .
13 It was , however , after Palace had acquired Cliff Holton and Dickie Dowsett that we saw Allen at his vintage best , spraying the passes and plying the crosses from which those big fellows scored the goals which first of all kept us in Division Three , and then took us up to the 2nd Division in 1963–64 .
14 Lydia put a mug of tea in front of her master and then took herself off to the dairy , where she and Martha unashamedly listened at the door .
15 The first members of the teams run up to the suitcases and put everything on , run round the back of the rest of the team and then take everything off and put it back in the suitcase before running back and touching the next member of the team who repeats the process .
16 This time of night , the reservations are pretty well settled ; all I have to do is pick out a room in one of the quieter areas and then take them up on a passkey .
17 them and then take them down .
18 And then take them back again .
19 I do n't need a box , oh only so you can break it and then take it back .
20 Looks like you 'll have to sort of like put it up for a day and then take it down for a week and put it back in again .
21 You could n't credit the money and then take it off later ?
22 ‘ Groups like Teardrop and the Bunnymen had time to develop their own space and sound and then take it out — like us , we had ten songs under our belts .
23 ‘ Groups like Teardrop and the Bunnymen had time to develop their own space and sound and then take it out — like us , we had ten songs under our belts .
24 When we got there we had to species of fish and then take it out and
25 You should put it there first and then taken them out .
26 The person who was most patient with him was Alison , who let him read his poems to her and sometimes took him out to lunch .
27 And there 's a fascinating article in this , the current edition , the January edition it is now , because they go so far in advance , of She magazine , which says that er , it 's a desperate plight sometimes , when you have people coming for Christmas who fall into several categories like lazy slobs , who do absolutely nothing , and misers , who turn up with a stale box of chocolates , and never take you out for a meal in return for your hospitality , and the amorous couples who er , embarrass you by er , er , noisily retiring to their bedroom , if I may put it that way , and then the guests who turn up in mid-row , and bicker systematically over the whole of the festive period .
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