Example sentences of "take [pers pn] [prep] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ The guide takes them along other tracks .
2 Martin takes them on unamplified , and after about an hour 's struggle , wins the day handsomely .
3 We all have people in our churches who have this sunny disposition , who can chat unselfconsciously with the shy and defensive newcomer , and so relax them that quickly and imperceptibly he takes them from small talk on to more serious matters .
4 Each department takes a different number of outlooks and takes them from different sources .
5 The walk from Boscastle to Tintagel ( 3 miles away ) takes you through spectacular coastal scenery .
6 Sheer walls thirty feet high enclose you , the way upstream being a clamber up the smooth lip of a nine-foot dry waterfall that takes you into Upper Ease Gill Kirk .
7 It takes you across lonely beaches and over wild cliff-tops .
8 Even if your interest only takes you on regular tours of the local antique or junk shops , it will give you some stimulation .
9 Today 's tour takes you to New and Old Delhi .
10 Welsh folklore has a richness all of its own and exploring some of the areas with strange tales takes you to unbeatable walking country amid fantastic scenery .
11 A cable car takes you from nearby Ehrwald to the Zugspitzkamm station at 9,203 feet which has been partly blasted out of the rock .
12 This episode takes him across Western Turkey and the Mediterranean , on to Greece , and Rhodes ( where he meets astrologer Patric Walker ) before hitting Africa in the shape of Egypt and Luxor .
13 Patrick 's roving lifestyle takes him between rented flats in London and Los Angeles , a house he owns in Dublin and to France and Portugal where he may decide to invest some of his new-found riches .
14 ( 2 ) Where a document of title to goods has been lawfully transferred to any person as buyer or owner of the goods , and that person transfers the document to a person who takes it in good faith and for valuable consideration , then — ; ( a ) if the last-mentioned transfer was by way of sale the unpaid seller 's right of lien or retention or stoppage in transit is defeated ; and ( b ) if the last-mentioned transfer was made by way of pledge or other disposition for value , the unpaid seller 's right of lien or retention or stoppage in transit can only be exercised subject to the rights of the transferee . ’
15 Much travelled in North-East cricket , Smith takes it in good part .
16 One could go further and give more weight to differences with lower sampling variability , but that takes us into confirmatory statistics and beyond the scope of this book .
17 That takes us to Joint Planning and the part of the voluntary organisations play or should play in the process .
18 Besides , I do n't take them into deep water .
19 That 's seconded , nice to know we have a straight choice , as you favour , we 'll take them in reverse order .
20 I was going to say can we take them in small groups ?
21 By way of a contrast to the more usual content found between these covers , let me take you to Georgian England at the beginning of the Nineteenth Century .
22 The Malt Whisky Trail , a one day car tour , will take you to world-famous distilleries .
23 A new gondola cable car will take you to dizzy heights , enabling you to appreciate the mountains in their true splendour .
24 The route will take you over old wooden drawbridges , past beautiful Dutch merchant houses and Holland 's most famous landmark , a restored windmill .
25 However , you will be tired by all this flurry of activity because you will still be doing regular work and the proposal — writing may take you into late nights and weekend work .
26 Local operators will take you in four-wheel-drive vehicles to explore the near outback , where the river has carved a series of spectacular gorges into a vast , rolling sand plain .
27 A two season bag will take you from late spring to early autumn , and a three-season bag can be used for all but winter conditions .
28 In November 1959 he found himself back in Montreal , ‘ to renew his neurotic affiliations ’ as he was to repeat endlessly to journalists ; meeting his friends and family , sometimes bumping into his uncles who would take him for expensive meals at top restaurants — such as the Ritz — and hotels ; and generally awakening and reawakening those impulses and memories which would fire his imagination and energise his mind for months to come .
29 Bill McGuire 's studies will take him to various volcanos around the Mediterranean and Indian Oceans .
30 . I 'm gon na take him to outer space to find another race , I 'm gon na take him to outer space .
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