Example sentences of "take [pers pn] [adv prt] [art] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It 's a great way for producing long banners or waste paper but And if you wan na actually reverse this process alt M takes it back the other way .
2 The other , on the face of it , gives less cause for revelling , since it takes us back a mere 70 years and is effectively an anniversary of an anniversary .
3 However , they paid little or no attention to her , and Lucy guessed that their minds were too occupied with the exciting venture which would take them down the foaming white waters of the river .
4 ‘ If you come back with me you can help me take it out the other end . ’
5 The fellow grinned and took them along a dark , smelly passageway into another chamber where the keeper of Newgate , Fitzosbert , was squatting behind a great oak table like a king enthroned in his palace .
6 That eventually took them down the wide , steep main street of a small town , then the road narrowed , crossed an old stone bridge , and began to climb , leaving behind the houses , the church with its tall , graceful steeple , and the half-timbered buildings .
7 I wish I 'd have took them out a long while ago when they were higher .
8 As Sister and Nurse Robins are swigging coffee with that drag Jones , I took him down the short cut through Eyes and shoved him into 15 .
9 Self-consciously they took the tureens from the kitchens into the dining room , placed them on the trolley , and took it round an empty table .
10 I took it out the other night ?
11 You took it out the other night , right ?
12 The falling of Burbank , taking us down the moral ladder , and the ‘ saggy bending of the knees ’ of Bleistein , taking us down the evolutionary ladder , lead to the declining ‘ smoky candle end of time ’ which prepares Burbank and the reader to ponder over ‘ Time 's ruins ’ , the etymology of ‘ ruins ’ being important .
13 The falling of Burbank , taking us down the moral ladder , and the ‘ saggy bending of the knees ’ of Bleistein , taking us down the evolutionary ladder , lead to the declining ‘ smoky candle end of time ’ which prepares Burbank and the reader to ponder over ‘ Time 's ruins ’ , the etymology of ‘ ruins ’ being important .
14 One of these walks used to take them down a narrow side-street in a busy part of London .
15 Many commonly-prescribed drugs increase the sensitivity of the skin and eyes to ultra-violet light — particularly if you take them over a long period of time .
16 Shall I hire a gondola and take you up the Grand Canal to the sound of trumpets ? ’
17 To take you back a wee bit before that er when you were an apprentice was your tuition from your journeymen quite good ?
18 take him out every single day !
19 I said I 'll leave mine out for the bloody bin men before I take it down the tippy .
20 First , how to persuade other member states not to insist on proposals which take us down the federal route and , second , how to avoid agreeing to wording which would be inconsistent with the wishes of the British parliament and electorate , while at the same time trying to reach an agreement .
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