Example sentences of "take [noun] [adv prt] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 The other quarry produces about 6,000 tons per annum , which is ground on the spot , and sent seven or eight miles by road for shipment by canal , a traction engine and trucks being used for the road haulage , which takes coals back to the quarry on the return journey .
2 The reason many directors resist starting a pension scheme is simply that it takes money out of the business for example , for expansion .
3 ( The purchase of Treasury bills takes money out of the money markets as it flows to the government , therefore sales of Treasury bills during a shortage creates a greater shortage .
4 As industrialisation takes work out of the home , women , if they are to be encouraged to join the labour force , must be assisted in child and home care .
5 Not far away is a miniature village ; a ‘ Noddy ’ train takes visitors back to the outskirts of Bridlington .
6 Barbarians , at the Dorman Museum until August 22 , takes visitors back to the days of woad , wonders and warrior queens .
7 Ray Hanna takes G–FIRE up for the first time , Elstree , March 14 , 1981. ( via Spencer Flack )
8 A scheme which takes teachers out of the classroom to give them experience in industry has been celebrating its one hundred thousandth placement .
9 Swindon teenager Jaimie King is on the crest of a wave today after winning the 100 metres breastroke title at the National swimming Championships at Sheffield … victory takes Jaimie through to the European Championships …
10 This was because the deuterium was continuing to be dissolved into the palladium and this takes energy out of the surroundings , acting like a refrigerator .
11 The women would take Nessie back to the house and they 'd all meet there again for something to eat and they 'd start all over again where they left off .
12 I 'll take Harpo/Chico over to a nice quiet corner . ’
13 Gina did n't take Magnus out in the gardens for a while after that , she could n't face meeting him again .
14 Now the strike has spread to boatmen , and no local people will take visitors out on the lake .
15 As an American commentator has remarked of Eagleton , ‘ You can take the boy out of Cambridge , but you ca n't take Cambridge out of the boy . ’
16 Mr Major would take sterling back into the ERM ‘ as soon as conditions allow ’ .
17 Soon , Rob would take S-Sugar on to the runway and wait for clearance from the control tower .
18 First he has to beat his former club , QPR , tomorrow night in the Coca-Cola Cup — a competition that can take Wednesday back into the UEFA Cup .
19 They were also all concerned about traffic congestion in the town and said the Cross Town Route should take traffic out of the town centre and not generate more .
20 A CLAIM by Borders Area of the National Farmers ' Union of Scotland that Government cuts in hill ewe subsidy would take £120,000 out of the local economy in three valleys alone has been criticised by Sir Hector Monro , Scottish minister of agriculture .
21 They help take students out of the confines of the classroom , while affording them the opportunity to practise pronunciation , grammar , structure and vocabulary .
22 Of the many exercises we took part in during the course , this was in fact one which members of the group remembered most clearly .
23 The final point is taking money out of the reserves to make sure that we do n't have to put back twenty two pounds on the council tax .
24 He took Sarah through to the parlour where the glow from a fire lent a more cheerful appearance to the book-lined retreat which had been exclusively his own since Adelaide 's death .
25 Thus the Immigration Acts , beginning with the 1962 Act ‘ took discrimination out of the market place and gave it the sanction of the state .
26 The establishment of English Heritage opened up the possibility of a second refuge for endangered houses , capable — at least in theory — of taking houses on without the massive endowments required by the National Trust .
27 In summertime trains run as often as every ten minutes taking holiday-makers through to the popular resort .
28 It was Ossie who took Swindon up into the 1st division — or so he thought .
29 He noticed the pieces with which Wyvis Hall was furnished , taking books out of the public library on antiques and porcelain and measuring the remembered articles against illustrations , catching his breath sometimes at mounting values .
30 On the face of it , Oi is performing a similar function to early punk — taking rock back to the basics , grafting a class accent on to the music , reviving the original rebel-delinquent cluster — the myth of Elvis-as-hub-cap-thief , a poor white loser up against the Law .
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