Example sentences of "[modal v] [verb] you at the [noun] " in BNC.

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1 ‘ I regret I must leave you at the door , Lady Isabel .
2 Right then , I 'll met you at the Co-op
3 Sit down on your bottom and I 'll catch you at the bottom , right you ready ?
4 ‘ In the meantime , I 'll expect you at the office on Monday morning .
5 I 'll expect you at the Presbytery in a few days with your donation . ’
6 Yeah , cos I might , I might see you at the station if you get the train .
7 I 'll see you at the inquest . ’
8 So I 'll see you at the course tomorrow . ’
9 ‘ I do hope that 's not my lasagne I can smell burning , my dear , ’ and while she moved swiftly to check the oven and to find that not a thing was burning , Naylor was saying , ‘ We 'll see you at the weekend , Travis . ’
10 ‘ I 'll see you at the weekend , then , ’ Leith said lightly , and was once more wanting to do something of a pugilistic nature to her employer when , just as though he lived there , he went to the door with Travis and saw him out .
11 Right , I 'll see you at the weekend .
12 I 'll see you at the end of April . ’
13 And I 'll see you at the Ritz at one .
14 I 'm looking forward to Hamlet , but I wo n't bother you at the theatre ; I 'll see you at the flat .
15 ‘ I 'll see you at the office on Monday morning , ’ Damian told her as he walked her home in the hot , humid night to her own villa next door and cicadas buzzed metallically as they walked past the fountain .
16 ‘ I 'll see you at the meeting , ’ said Jeremy .
17 ‘ I 'll see you at the château tonight for dinner . ’
18 Well I 'll drop you at the paper shop while I go round
19 Well I 'll drop you at the paper shop while I go round
20 Get a ticket to Stowbridge and I 'll meet you at the station . ’
21 I 'll meet you at the bar . ’
22 ‘ I 'll meet you at the car in five minutes . ’
23 I 'll meet you at the workshop . "
24 I 'll meet you at the Almades opposite the Daily News offices . ’
25 I 'll meet you at the tights department , but you can go and have a look at the , anything else first if you want to and then come back to the tights , I 'll shall be a minute or two .
26 ‘ But I 'll phone you at the weekend .
27 I do n't have anything else that I could show you at the moment I 'm afraid .
28 ‘ I 'd like you at the airport an hour from now , at six . ’
29 Right , let's have you at the table .
30 Both states were regarded as not only undesirable but criminal : after the Burgess/Maclean scandal in 1951 , police prosecutions against homosexuals reached a peak in 1953/4 , while the scare headlines accorded by the press to the Clapham Common murder in the summer of 1953 lodged in the public 's heads the equation that people who wore Edwardian clothes would knife you at the drop of a hat .
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