Example sentences of "take [pers pn] to the [noun] [prep] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 A couple of wins would take them to the edge of the promotion race .
2 He 'll take them to the top of the stairs and make sure they know when to go on — usually by the gracious means of a prod in the back .
3 Right would you take them to the kitchen for me please because I 'm putting these bits away
4 When Nigel was at home , Gina usually made him take them to the Launderette in a black dust bag .
5 ‘ If you 'll take me to the concert in the cloisters at Pollensa this weekend . ’
6 Coolly , she said , ‘ OK — I 'll leave you to get on with whatever work will take you to the middle of the night . ’
7 A twenty-five minute drive will take you to the races at Newmarket .
8 A visit to Boscobel House will take you to the scene of one of the most romantic stories in English history .
9 End will take you to the end of that line .
10 And if you press end , it should take you to the end of the line
11 ‘ I 'll take you to the town of Killala and back , and me husband will take you to Sligo ’ , she promised .
12 Right , can I take you to the recommendation on page six .
13 Right , can I take you to the recommendation on page nine that the programme be circulated to all members of the committee .
14 Can I take you to the recommendation on page five of the report then .
15 There are several delightful marked walks through the fields and woods around the village ( free guided walks are organised by the Tourist Office ) while a cable car ride will take you to the summit of the dramatic Patscherkofel , where there is some splendid hiking terrain , and a viewing platform giving stunning views over Innsbruck and the Inn Valley .
16 After a spot of scrambling below the summit of Carn Mor Dearg , the only intimidating section is at the other end , just below the boulder field that will take you to the summit of the Ben .
17 I 'll take you to the ends of the world in it ! ’
18 On a parish visit the pastor would sometimes take him to the bedside of a dying man or woman and Ramsey would sit long by the bed , saying almost nothing , but holding hands and at the end giving a blessing .
19 His repugnance , for example , does not take him to the point of seeking to prevent those who wished to take part in war from doing so .
20 It 's all part of the drive that she believes , will take her to the top of her forthcoming profession and to that end , she is not prepared to put a time limit on her arrival .
21 Exploring that path would take her to the edge of a precipice over which she did not wish to step .
22 In the afternoons , she must always be home at 4.30 — so that the carer can take her to the lavatory before leaving for the day .
23 Anyone who 'd paid money for their dog , or did n't know where it had been , should take it to the god in Lāmri to be blessed and cured : and if anyone had been bitten recently , or had been in contact with the rabid dog , they too should see that god .
24 The dealer asked the proprietor of the shop if he could take it to the Gemäldegalerie in Berlin-Dahlem for an opinion and authentication , and was given the picture .
25 Let Ben take it to the man in Lancaster .
26 But there is reason to think that our senses do not take us to the heart of things .
27 I tell you another year of feasibility studies will take us to the point of no return .
28 ‘ After the coronation they 'll take us to the palace for the night .
29 For Peirce , statistical sampling is the fundamental kind of ampliative inference , and for this he derives its ‘ validity ’ from his understanding of reality — its repeated use will take us to the truth in the long run .
30 Peirce could probably allow the same : his position rests upon the belief that there is a logical guarantee that induction will take us to the truth in the long run , but that our confidence in the short-run efficacy of the method is simply an ‘ acritical ’ commonsense certainty which may be susceptible to scientific explanation .
  Next page