Example sentences of "n't [verb] them [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Well if they actually took the time to explain to you what went into those sausages , you probably would n't eat them at all , would you ?
2 Do n't eat them like that !
3 ‘ They do n't make them like that nowadays , ’ he agreed , shaking out a scarlet Victorian ballgown .
4 I do n't want them after this visit tomorrow I might go out one more time
5 ‘ I do n't want them in this country .
6 They do n't build them like this any more — Healey ( top ) , Cobra ( above )
7 Here the first thing to check is whether they are slips or not : if the pupil can correct his own errors , do n't count them as serious spelling miscues .
8 I do n't need them for that .
9 I let him keep young ones for sentimental reasons since I do n't need them for practical purposes .
10 A whole lot in the council houses the distillery I do n't know them at all .
11 Their value is 200 GCs if sold to a collector ; non-collectors wo n't buy them at any price .
12 If consumers had to suffer all the pollution caused by the products they bought , they would n't buy them in such damaging quantities .
13 ‘ We gave two stupid free kicks away in the first half and did n't clear them at all .
14 Ferns and brambles whipped at him , but he did n't feel them at all .
15 South Sussex may be ludicrously over-confident , but we ca n't beat them with three players . ’
16 Bernice had n't seen them at first : their black silk cloaks merged into the darkness beyond the doorway , and only the jerky movements of the red-painted muzzles of their stubby blasters revealed their location .
17 It was a full week before they reappeared in The Bar ; we had n't seen them for six nights and there had been much discussion .
18 A couple of Russian exiles ; I have n't seen them for ten years .
19 There were five boats moored to the shored-up bank , all with names beginning Duke , hung with bright blue fenders that had n't saved them from long scratches and stains .
20 that 's why I do n't give them like that
21 When we are old we take longer to recover and because we ca n't discharge them to nursing kind of beds then there 'll be back up in the John Radcliffe Hospital and extra pressure there .
22 I 've still got them , y'know , and I ai n't losin' them in any bath . ’
23 Lentils coming from Ethiopia , you get wheat from the States , rice from the States , ap apples from France , tea from India , coffee from Brazil and Columbia , sugar from the Windward Islands , bananas from all over the place , you know those are the things that keep us alive , no , you know , whether we one think they are or not , but I mean them things are what keeps the economy alive for one , it 's also what keeps us personally alive if you do n't know why we take an interest in Third World issues , I would say that it 's that , we 're dependent on these countries , we could produce enough foods for our own needs , but we would n't have oranges , coffee , tea , sugar , you know cos we ca n't grow them in this country we , we really depend on those things to stay alive , and for that reason alone we should have some kind of interest , if you went to Kenya for example they would be staggered at how little you know about their country given how much they know about yours they know a lot about this country , a lot of it is a bit loopy , but then what you know about their country is probably a bit off centre as well , and you know I hope that this is something that we 're reversing in this section , our perceptions of the Third World or the south or whatever we choose to call it , colour a lot of the things that we think and do and say and it increases the amount of racism that there is around us all , all those kind of things , erm and I think that it is really important to look at what a perception is , you know , for example what 's your perception of this ?
24 " I understand that people do n't welcome them in these parts . "
25 Sometimes the bible surprises us a little bit of course , and it puts it finger on things that we perhaps do n't really want to talk about or we do n't even consider as sins and the bible is quite clear that not all sins are what we do often there what we do n't do in parable that Jesus told concerning the traveller , the man who went down to Jericho , we do n't condemn the priest and the levite for what they did , but we do condemn them for what they did n't do , their sin was not what they did , it was what they left undone , going over and looking at the man was very note worthy , as least there was some interest there and we do n't condemn them for that , but we do condemn them for hurrying along and not reaching out and helping the man in the Pistol of James and chapter four and verse seventeen James says there , any one then who knows the good he ought to do and does n't do it , sins so the sins that you and I comment or the sins rather that we are guilty of are not just the things that we do there of times the things that we do n't do and sometimes there more difficult for us to put a finger on , we can justify them so very easily its been said that all it needs for evil to triumph , is for good men to say or to do nothing well lets look at the , that , illu illustration there that we have in the second book of kings .
26 If you want to keep turtles happy , do n't keep them at all .
27 If you want to keep turtles happy , do n't keep them at all .
28 The fact that , one has as a as a council , credit approvals , it does allow you to set them against capital receipts in in further financing new capital works , to the extent that you do n't use them for other purposes .
29 Good , people use commas much too often , and some they do n't use them at all .
30 You know , you ca n't amuse them at that ta er can you ?
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