Example sentences of "[noun] [verb] put " in BNC.

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1 Manufacturers do put static protection devices on chips so the problem is nowhere near as bad as it was but it 's better to be safe than out of pocket .
2 This statement is of course true , because Tamburlaine does put Bajazeth in a cage in his camp , in full view of all his men .
3 Hopes for some juicy corporate finance work helped put another 9 points on Kleinwort Benson at 260p and 13 onto Hambros at 263p .
4 The committee , chaired by Conservative MP Hugh Rossi , wants an amendment to the Trade Descriptions Act to help put an end to companies making misleading " green " claims bought about by the rise of green consumerism .
5 Among the Board 's principal aims is to provide the leadership that can negotiate a further reduction in betting tax to help put racing on a firm financial footing .
6 Carbon dating helped put an age to the body and helped the archaeologists to understand his lifestyle .
7 Wilson did put some flesh on the bones in a television interview with Norman Hunt , only to have it torn off in strips by the venerable Bridges , long since retired but still a determined advocate of a unitary Treasury dominating economic policy from the centre .
8 Now actually Mill did put the his erm this proposal forward , he was a member of parliament for a few years and he was trying to get this discussed in parliament .
9 Michelle does put her hair up herself but said it usually slips out because ‘ there 's just too much of it , besides , it 's just so well-conditioned ! ’
10 The Scotsman has also established that consultants helping put the finishing touches to a feasibility study on Rosyth for Medway Ports have also been acting for Scottish Enterprise .
11 If you want to experiment at home , it 'll cost you far less than in a salon but you should get a friend to help put the rollers in to get perfectly even curls .
12 When the mare is in at night do put a rug on her , feel her ears to check she is warm enough .
13 No player not appearing in that particular game dared put his face round the door .
14 It 's nice to have an estimator represented on the course because I think that you 'll admit that people do put some thought into this and the , the rates that you use for labour and plant , you try to make realistic .
15 Yeah , yeah and she 's , yeah , and she says she 's so fed cos to her there 's nothing wrong with her , the baby did put on weight last week , but she said you know , what do you do in here all day .
16 ‘ One tries to be open-minded , ’ Callaghan said , ‘ but that sort of approach does put one off , rather .
17 If Mansell does put pen to paper , our own local Williams team should be right on the pace come the first Grand Prix next year .
18 We arrived at all of the locations in good time , although the traffic in Stoke did put us under a little pressure towards the end , we finished with a whole five minutes to spare !
19 Sometimes his superiors did put their foot down .
20 Men do put money in some funny places — particularly when they do n't want their wives to know about it . ’
21 Its application does put its exponents in the firing line of critical appraisal .
22 EDP does put a premium on questionnaires which are constructed of direct closed questions which can be coded for data entry .
23 The plain truth , however , is that if the buyer does put off buying until another day it is as likely that he will buy from the competition .
24 The official condemnation of the Copernican system did put constraints on what could be taught , though the option of presenting it as merely a mathematical hypothesis was still open , and increasingly taken during the course of the seventeenth century .
25 ‘ Eeh ! his idea did put the fear of God into me .
26 In the early stages the rigidity of the boots did put pressure on the front of my ankles , making them uncomfortable to wear .
27 Lotus wants a partner to help put a £1,500 to £2,000 version of the bike into the shops within a year .
28 Three penalties helped put them in front .
29 Because you do not want a return to destructive two party politics and you do know at first hand that Liberal Democrats do put ‘ people first ’ ; that local income tax is a fair and predictable alternative to the poll tax ; that our stance on Hong Kong is morally right and that we realise the urgency of environmental action with targets for achievement away ahead of the other two parties .
30 But when Covent Garden does put black dancers on its payroll , what then ?
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