Example sentences of "keep us in [noun sg] " in BNC.
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1 | Montague and the sergeant-major called incessantly , keeping us in line . |
2 | Erm so he 's keeping us in limbo really |
3 | Failure to define , at any rate in politics , is the principal factor which keeps us in employment . |
4 | He keeps us in touch with God . |
5 | With Mel Blyth alongside and John Jackson in goal , John was part of the triumvirate who did most to keep us in Division one for four seasons . |
6 | ‘ They came to keep us in parley , while you assault us . ’ |
7 | You may walk with me like a civilised man if you care to , but I warn you there 'll be an archer behind to keep us in view , so 1 would n't advise you to try any tricks , they 'd do you no good . ’ |
8 | We 've been flying here since September , but our wives have regularly sent out Country Living to keep us in touch . |
9 | Just as Elisha could answer the widow 's need because he had been in touch with his Lord , so the Holy Spirit is God 's agent to keep us in touch with Him , and to make us pure . |
10 | It helps a great deal to keep us in touch with what 's happening at school and enables us to exert some influence , I suppose , on what happens in schools , hopefully in the interests of the candidates . |
11 | The Data System is just part of a massive development programme to keep us in front and to offer our clients the best licensed taxi service there is . |
12 | Can we endorse that , and ask the officers to come back to us and keep us in touch with their work . |
13 | It was , however , after Palace had acquired Cliff Holton and Dickie Dowsett that we saw Allen at his vintage best , spraying the passes and plying the crosses from which those big fellows scored the goals which first of all kept us in Division Three , and then took us up to the 2nd Division in 1963–64 . |
14 | It kept us in harbour until the following afternoon when , we decided it had moderated enough to push on to Tobermory . |
15 | But notices warning of reindeer and even of moose ( elk ) crossing-places kept us in reality , and soon the country began to open out , forests giving way to scrubby birch and willows with rolling hills and quiet lakes in the valleys . |