Example sentences of "[pron] [pron] would do [prep] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 Having created my opposition , I had to decide what I would do to them .
2 I know what I would do with him , ’ Violet said , yet , too , Tom must be a lusty brute and delightfully wicked .
3 Speaking from her home in Ralphs ' Wifes Lane , she said : ‘ Andrew is very special , I do n't know what I would do without him .
4 ( Rip ‘ em to pieces , that 's what I 'd do to them .
5 I wondered what she was doing , if she was all right , what I 'd do with her when I got home …
6 I do n't know what I 'd do with them . ’
7 ‘ I do n't know what I 'd do without them these days . ’
8 Most social workers who are in touch with the elderly disabled living alone hear the praises of their Home Helps sung time and time again : ‘ She 's like a daughter to me ’ , and ‘ I do n't know what I 'd do without her ’ .
9 ‘ Yes , I do n't know what I 'd do without her , ’ said Marilla , smiling .
10 ‘ I do n't know what I 'd do without you two . ’
11 ‘ I do n't know what I 'd do without you , Mike , ’ Adam said winningly .
12 I do n't know what I 'd do without you , honest . ’
13 I do n't know what I 'd do without you .
14 what I 'd do without you Oh my
15 What you would do for her , so would I. ’
16 Er I do n't know what we 'd do without you Paul I 'm gon na , I 'm gon na
17 So far AMP executives are not sure where the Pearl is going wrong nor what they would do about it , other than perhaps improve the British group 's technology and have more centralisation of the selling operations .
18 It matters to the democracies because it is a battle about ideas they believe in , because it is on their doorstep , and because the rest of the world has been watching to see what they would do about it .
19 He knew why they had swept him from his horse and he was terrified of what they would do to him .
20 ‘ If they do that to a dumb animal you wonder what they would do to us if we 'd disturbed them . ’
21 They 'd always be wanting nylons , he thought , he 'd seen what they 'd do for them during the war .
22 Across the road in Parliament in the late sixties , as Wilson , Castle and Crossman wore themselves out in the cause , as they saw it , of a more modern and socially just Britain , there sat in the Leader of the Opposition 's office a man who not only shared the Jenkins view of workload but was planning exactly what he would do about it if the electorate gave him his chance .
23 He dropped the wig into the papyrus-chest , wondering what he would do with it , and whose head it had adorned before Nubenehem had come by it .
24 There was no knowing what he 'd do with it .
25 And as he leaned against the railings he suddenly tasted it , the moment Creed had planned for him , the moment he 'd always longed for , dreaded now , still longed for , and it was burnt sugar , sweet and caustic , on his tongue , it was like the flight of a bird across a window , it was there and it was gone , he could n't dwell on it , he could n't let the terror in , all he knew was what it would do for him , he knew that it would give him membership , he 'd be past the sliding sheet of glass , he 'd finally belong .
26 ‘ Imagine what it 'd do to him . ’
27 What it 'd do to him ? ’ he said .
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