Example sentences of "have take [art] [noun] into " in BNC.

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1 The critic necessarily has to take a manifesto into account .
2 Had the police done nothing , farmers might have taken the law into their own hands .
3 Beron on Dec. 4 described himself as victim of a plot by his political opponents , including erstwhile colleagues in the opposition , thereby fuelling rumours that Trenchev and other militant anti-socialists had retaliated against Beron for having taken the UDF into negotiations on a coalition government .
4 If my wife and I both go then the car is cheaper by £10 , but that is not a lot to pay for the increased safety of rail travel , the convenience of not having to take a car into London and indeed the fact that we can read or go to sleep on the train .
5 He 'd have to take the matter into his own hands .
6 Some drivers are reported to have taken the law into their own hands by illegally carrying weapons to defend themselves .
7 they used to , well , it , it was night shift and they had took a camera into the er factory were they were doing the cars and he had blokes
8 Now they 've taken a plunge into the dive computer market and the outcome is the DataMax Sport .
9 He did n't know whether Alice ever thought of it , or whether the trauma had erased it from her mind so that she now believed the version he had formulated , had taken the lie into her unconscious and made it her truth .
10 In the meantime , whether or not Acheson 's alleged insensitivity to the nationalism of China 's leaders could be reckoned to extend southwards to Vietnam and whether or not the evidence suggests European rather than Asian priorities , Truman 's momentous post-war Democratic Administration , and his partnership with Acheson , had taken the US into the tiger 's cage .
11 The van had taken the exit into the hotel 's rear yard , lurching and swinging towards the open gate that led to Crofton Street .
12 The original detentions had been undertaken without the approval of the government , which admitted that it had failed to exert its authority over rebellious troops in the Agadez region who had taken the law into their own hands .
13 One eyewitness said : ‘ Di had taken the corner into the school a bit wide and had stopped to avoid a car coming out .
14 For the first month of her life Mrs MacDonagh had taken the baby into her own house , along with Eleanor 's eighteen-month-old brother Patrick , and she had bottle fed the baby and kept an eye on her brother amidst the debris of her own life and the squalor of her enormous family .
15 The feeling persisted and suddenly , although he knew he was being ridiculous , he felt he had to take a ride into Mansfield to have a look at the site where the old Empire Theatre had once stood .
16 But only 200,000 have taken a leap into the dark to buy non-privatised quoted shares .
17 Thousands of Ulster citizens have taken the law into their own hands to save their country , many of these people were encouraged by the speeches of our ‘ leaders ’ ; many were frustrated that speeches were all they made .
18 ‘ This is an utterly stupid act where a group of men have taken the law into their own hands . ’
19 The construction of spontaneous housing settlements and the way this has induced several governments to support self-help schemes demonstrates the way squatters have taken the situation into their own hands and provided themselves with some sort of shelter .
20 Well I hope she 'll be interested enough to , but , not really before she 's six , cos I asked him last couple of times ago , he said , what sort of age , cos obviously the size of the hands comes into it , they ca n't do too much , but he said he would n't consider before six and you ough t 'a have to take the parents into consideration , of a child that age you got ta have a parent who 's prepared to sit there and make sure the child does what he 's set them to do , because , oh Amy , you not getting any out of that .
21 ‘ There 's times when you have to take the law into your own hands , ’ Tumbleweed laughed , ‘ nothing to do with books . ’
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