Example sentences of "[vb past] me to [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I skulked down one side of the garden and went through the arch which led me to a walled garden in the middle of which there was a fountain playing .
2 He led me to a long , low building .
3 I gave my orders and they led me to a private room and brought me some writing paper and a pen .
4 Where was Um Al-Farajh , I asked him , and he led me to a large square of fir trees and pointed to the earth .
5 He led me to a large , upright scallop of rock .
6 The house we sat in was still in chaos , so she led me to the sunny kitchen , where we talked and drank coffee , surrounded by boxes and plants and the smell of paint .
7 And her white Reeboks screeched at the marble as she turned and led me to the waiting forms .
8 The second day continued where the first day left off : four catches by Hick to equal the record for a Test against Pakistan originally set by the little-remembered spinner Jim McConnon of Glamorgan in 1954 , and then my researches led me to the remarkable fact that John Birch , who played for Notts from 1973 to 1988 , was known as ‘ Bonk ’ .
9 On the day before de Macon sailed on his second voyage , the Ralembergs invited me to a formal supper .
10 Sure enough , a high-pitched peeping drew me to the stable , and there on the floor was the hen with one minute black puff-ball of a chick .
11 He referred me to the first of several psychiatrists I was to visit for a year .
12 Uncle Joe subjected me to the same torture and humiliation every time we were alone together — although , thankfully , he never actually went as far as raping me .
13 Ellen had gone to her one-room apartment in town while Thessy was reading his Bible in the main-cabin , so I heated myself some baked beans in Wavebreaker 's microwave , spread them on buttered toast , soaked them in brown sauce , then ate a morose supper on deck until the bugs drove me to the screened sanctuary of the staterooms below .
14 The Australian representative of the Mission , who drove me to the Southern Cross Hotel in Sydney , explained that the Mantela , a Sanderstown boat of 5,000 tons which normally plied between the islands , had just finished a refit in Sydney and was about to sail two days after my arrival .
15 I remember a hansom pipped me to a good prospect , in Threadneedle Street .
16 What really attracted me to the whole idea was that June said : ‘ Personally I think it is the greatest thing since sliced bread . ’
17 The unremitting four-mile ascent to the high pass over the ridge reduced me to a walking wet rag ; I was literally soaked to the skin and could feel rivulets chasing each other down my bosom .
18 He directed me to a main road on the edge of Jaffa and to a small lane that ran off it to the north .
19 He either kicked me under the table or something and we were sitting across from each other … just a foot or two , and he passed it over , directed me to the top paragraph and had an expression of this was a surprising entry .
20 But my heart was not in insurance , and when Fred Workman recalled me to the editorial offices I rushed back to my old love .
21 A cheerful , freckled young woman showed me to a small seedy room and I began to unpack .
22 The lights were on over the airfield when we landed and ‘ Deemy ’ showed me to the Russian equivalent of the American B.O.Q. adjoining a very handsome and well-furnished Officers ' Lounge and Recreation Room .
23 The Fernies got rid of her when I left and she walked me to the front gate .
24 She left us there a few minutes , then , coming to the door , beckoned me to the next room .
25 She left her second cup of tea , and she followed me to the front door .
26 A boat returned me to the little coral landing-strip ; Friendly Islands Airways took me down to Tongatapu ; and within half a day I was settled in a small hotel in Auckland , waiting for the weekly Cathay Pacific jet home .
27 She grabbed my arm and pulled me to the outer door .
28 The striking of the half hour alerted me to the incoming tide of darkness .
29 A splendid , concise article in your Apr 26 Business section alerted me to the underhand profiteering of at least one of the high street banks at its farmer customers ' expense before the scandal broke in the national press and before the Chancellor of the Exchequer carpeted the bank bosses .
30 I began to tremble violently and would have fainted , had he not grabbed me by the elbow and guided me to a low wall , where I slumped down .
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