Example sentences of "and see [pron] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Must go back to the kids and see them to the bus .
2 While some senior policemen , like Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Kenneth Newman , wanted to stress the link between the police and other areas of ‘ social policy ’ ( Metropolitan Police , 1986 ) , the official government response attempted to decontextualize the riots and see them as the actions of a small minority who were either criminalized or influenced by extreme political ideas .
3 Erm if you still do n't understand it , come and see me at the end of the lecture , okay ?
4 Come and see me at the Apollo , Oxford , where I 'm appearing in the pantomime Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs .
5 Come and see me in the studio any time after that and I 'll present you with a couple of bottles of duty-free in compensation for any hassle .
6 Eddie Gilfoyle allegedly said that mum-to-be Paula was leaving him but his workmates were still able to speak to her at home and see her in the area .
7 Napoleon marched through it on his way to Moscow , but today the road is used by those who wish to avoid the pressures of autobahn driving and see something of the pleasant , rolling countryside of Westphalia .
8 In spite of all this , or perhaps because of it , we made an early enough start to reach Aurillac in plenty of time to buy our picnic lunch and see something of the old town .
9 As soon as she 'd freshened up she would go out for a meal and see something of the city and the people who lived here .
10 Then I walk out of here and see something in the paper and I 'm right back there . ’
11 If we look at each of the consonants just mentioned and see which of the features each one has , we get a table like this , where + means that a phoneme does possess that feature and — means that it does not :
12 In passing through Inverness , do not grudge to halt a night to visit the islands : if the night is moonlit , revisit the scene , and see it under the mellow beams .
13 Still others express horror about falling moral standards and foul language on television and see it as the agent of moral corruption of the young .
14 You must come again next year and see it from the cliff edge . ’
15 Go and see it in the British Museum ; it is a far more moving subject than any jewelled bauble or elegant vase .
16 They want to take your clients and see you off the map ?
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