Example sentences of "be take [adv] to " in BNC.

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1 Often bad things happen after — you know , like you 're taken away to school , or they tell you someone died or summat like that .
2 But while some operators may be taking longer to firm up their plans , oil supply companies did not leave Offshore Europe empty-handed .
3 If you are not disciplined enough to arrive at the agency as though dressed for work you may not be taken on to the books .
4 The train would be allowed to cross the border if there was an absolute assurance that the children would be taken on to Britain .
5 They could also be taken on to rough pasture , to distant resources , or even kept in woodland ( their natural habitat ) , though milkers would not be taken too far from the settlement .
6 Animals arrive with forged documentation which claims that they have been bred in captivity , and which therefore entitles them to be taken on to other western destinations .
7 How far does the iron ore have to be taken inland to the nearest blast furnaces ?
8 Sabine had half expected to be taken round to some tradesman 's entrance , but Marie-Christine led the way to the main door , chattering nineteen to the dozen , clearly relieved that her mission was almost accomplished .
9 The school 's on an island and you have to be taken over to it .
10 George Wood had hinted , and not too darkly , about the ‘ lads ’ who knew how to get past the guards and into the mines at night : he had intimated that there was a prosperous smugglers ' route through the highest mountain passes to the coast where the ore would be taken over to Ireland or down to Liverpool and Swansea .
11 If the mail message consists of only one page , you will be taken straight to the Print/Retain/Delete prompt .
12 Hitherto a shameful brothel man , Salim is uplifted by their meetings in his flat : ‘ My wish for an adventure with Yvette was a wish to be taken up to the skies . ’
13 Every militiaman in Lebanon should perhaps be taken up to the Dog River to see these memorials to pride and power .
14 As always with cohort measures , the data can not be taken up to the present day without a considerable element of projection ( broken line ) of the generation rate .
15 These post-coital hormonal contraceptives can be taken up to 72 hours after intercourse .
16 Henniker and I were to be taken up to Mr. Ingard 's room , Spalding and Miss Robinson were to go to the offices allotted to us on the second floor .
17 The only ground on which such a right could be defeated , according to Dworkin , would be a competing right advanced by another individual , and even then one such right could not be taken automatically to subordinate another .
18 It found that on average , women expect to be taken out to dinner ten times before they 'll have sex with a man . ’
19 It would have to be taken out to the van , and that would certainly have been a job for mother and son , a major job at that .
20 Downstairs wastes ( from the kitchen sink , for example ) can be taken out to a gully as in the older system , except that they must discharge below the level of the grid on the top of the gully , which means using a back-inlet gully or one with a hole cut in the grid .
21 Information has to be taken in to the brain — often through the eyes but this is only because humans rely so much upon this sense .
22 ‘ Mummy wants some shoes to be taken in to be stitched , and I can call in at Jessica Turvey 's .
23 It would be unreasonable to expect the reader to believe that so many professional scientists and administrators could be taken in to such an extent as the tale required .
24 Such information will be taken in to the evaluation procedure by the Press .
25 The mother of the groom may also ask to see the bride and she will be taken off to a remote room in the bride 's house , away from the eyes of other members of her hareem , for the bride is in strict purdah for the coming wedding .
26 He watched their departure through a spreading mist , and when the last car had gone and the avenue was silent except for the long sigh of grass , he allowed himself to be taken back to his room .
27 In June 1989 the East Londoner had taken a load to Barcelona , where depot staff loaded his trailer with a mixed consignment to be taken back to London .
28 The track had been extensively mined by the Italians and the captured German staff car ran over one , injuring Lieutenant Sutherland who had to be taken back to Siwa .
29 It seems that Antonietta was nearby when I fainted and arranged for me to be taken back to her house .
30 The plan of action will be written and taken to a full meeting of the governing body for its agreement or amendment ; it will then be taken back to the staff .
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