Example sentences of "[vb infin] us [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 And on the ones cos they were trying to s screw us down to the floor and on the popular metric where they I knew they were gon na they could find better suppliers , I was only about two per cent on some of those .
2 The end of Genesis did not bring us back to the beginning , but it surely left us heading in the right direction .
3 Which must bring us back to the UK , which had dreadful years in 1991 and 1992 and which may not be much better in 1993 .
4 Well yes , but that , remember we provided for up to two hundred million which we thought would see us through to the end of ninety two .
5 Johnny was immediately made captain , a position he held for nearly five years , and scored on his debut , but even Johnny 's seven goals from the 12 remaining games could not keep us out of the new basement division .
6 ‘ You can drop us off on the corner if you like , Bill . ’
7 ‘ If you could just drop us off at the first five-star hotel you come to . ’
8 ‘ We 've been struggling a bit at Everton , especially at home , but we hope that will set us up for the rest of the season . ’
9 ‘ You 'd better take us up to the refrigerator factory , ’ Gary said .
10 After we woke , he would take us on to the bigger islands , known as the Big Bush ’ .
11 These rather gloomy thoughts were in our minds as we arrived , a bit soothed but still edgy , to find that the last ferry over the Rhone from Salin which would take us on to the road to Martigues had left at 11.30 and there would not be another until 2 o'clock .
12 ‘ Ca n't you take us in to the Bus station ?
13 In the long term , he said , the government would not take us out of the recession ; the recession would work out naturally .
14 Its expansion could take us out of the recession without further inflation and increasing unemployment .
15 ‘ Well , Archie has a boat , and he says he can take us out to the bird islands , and I 'm sure we could get him to take you somewhere in the Land-Rover where you can fish .
16 I know a way through the keep that will take us out near the stables and the postern .
17 Cos when the well as soon as you could walk in the summer er you know when weather permitting my mam 'd take us down on the beach there and , Here you are , sink or swim in you 'd go into the water .
18 A ‘ cross theology ’ , not on its own , let me add , but central to our preaching , will take us back to the central verity of our faith .
19 Many people will be concerned at my suggestion that drawing should be taught in our schools , perhaps fearing that it will take us back to the kind of dull lesson I have described , with children being taught unimaginative and stereotyped ways of drawing .
20 That really did take us back to the good old days .
21 Er we at the County Council think that to delete that Greater York erm dimension would take us back to the realms of uncertainty , past uncertainty , in the Greater York area , we 're therefore proceeding with a Greater York dimension in policy H One at none thousand seven hundred dwellings , which equates to hundred percent migration .
22 Du n no , I might ask my dad cos he 'll probably take us back to the pub
23 The teacher would call us up to the front of the class to recite it , and woe betide anyone who faltered .
24 Reflecting a befuddlement judges often express when dealing with science ( and revealing again that science is not yet part of the mainstream of education ) one of the justices said : ‘ There are Harvard law professors on both sides of this case ; I had hoped you could get together and lead us out of the wilderness . ’
25 Miners par excellence , depending which side you are on , are seen as the satyrs or the saviours of the working class , they are either the devils or the messiahs who will lead us out of the land of Canaan .
26 Why do we let him lead us out of the Windsor , along that murky little lane they renamed Finch Street ?
27 I think that really does lead us back to the starting point which is the County Council 's view that er er that comprehensive study needs to be done as a matter of urgency and steps are being taken to get that work moving very soon now .
28 ‘ He 'll navigate us down into the ice , and afterwards he will act as our guide . ’
29 Do n't leave us out in the cold
30 ‘ We were about twenty minutes altogether from the point where we realized they could n't get us down to the time when we stepped on to the roof .
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