Example sentences of "you [vb base] [verb] they [adv] [prep] " in BNC.

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1 If you want to take them out of the book
2 you want to talk them back to safety ;
3 He , it says John Wainwright , there we are if you want to pick them up by John Wainwright , that 's where they are .
4 She will carry them around with her , and is likely to prove aggressive if you try to take them away during this phase .
5 Many people say generally that ‘ there should be no whaling for ethical reasons ’ , but when you try to pin them down to a formulation of those ethics , you find it exceedingly difficult and , I am afraid to say , probably unconvincing to most people of the nations of the world .
6 As soon as you start screwing them up on cash issues , delaying payments , these relationships deteriorate .
7 You 're quite a bird , even if you do like 'em long in the tooth ! ’
8 So you 've bribed them along with a promise of sweets
9 If you 've checked them out to your satisfaction , then fair enough .
10 You 've destroyed them out of sheer pettiness ! ’
11 When you 've got them away from the mains , what d' ya do with them ?
12 I 've brought out a pack of cards , but when you know you 've got them only to while away the hours , they are as exciting as a stack of washing up .
13 Could you still touch them if you 've pulled them away from the mains and everything ?
14 You 've left them behind in that bloody bar , have n't you ?
15 You 've dropped them off from , straight from school ?
16 A Will is a commonsense and legal way to ensure that any possessions you have are given to the people you wish to pass them on to .
17 You can say that if they do n't keep to the agreed rules of the drama , then the magic will start to fail ; if they climb up the wall-bars when you have asked them not to , you can say that the magic only works when their feet are touching the ground , thus using the fiction of the drama to limit the space they work in and remind them through a dramatic device of those rules which you will have agreed before the lesson begins ( see also the section on " Control " in Chapter 4 ) .
18 So you have to split them up between you .
19 The value of having such materials in brief and physically separate forms is that it is easier to manipulate ideas while they are still in note form than it is once you have written them out in prose .
20 Then you have to divide them up into those which make slender trees and others which remain as bushes with a fountain-like outline .
21 I dare say that you too , Mr. Speaker , were inspired by all you saw , and of course you have visited them all over the years and have great experience of this subject .
22 ‘ Oh well , I do n't think this is the kind of place you have to put them down for at birth .
23 You could find yourself in the ludicrous situation where you have to take them out of the country for half-an-hour and take them back in again .
24 ‘ The IAAF must urgently review the situation , for when you make your rules you have to carry them out to the letter of the law .
25 but the second way in which section fourteen arises is this slightly more oblique way , erm , it 's , it 's not really the question of competition law it 's more a question of administrative law or constitutional law , erm whether it arises on the question er , your Lordship will have to decide , but , if , if it does then we believe that our case is extremely strong , because what one is saying here is , is section fourteen a block to an article eighty five action , erm does it make it either virtually impossible or something lesser excessively difficult , er and we say er that that 's one aspect and two can we show it 's discriminatory , well we say first of all it is discriminatory because even on analysis of the bad faith argument they are putting in a claimant with an article eighty five case to an extraordinary length in order to make good his case , he first of all has to super declaration presumably that he is entitled to damages , but he ca n't get damages all he 's entitled to is the declaration if then do n't satisfy that claim by paying up and their not going to be ordered by the court to pay up because that 's a claim for damages and you ca n't have that then you have to sue them again on the basis of breach of bad faith , er no other provision in English law would go to that effect and that of course even , even that assumes whether rightly or wrongly and we say possibly wrongly that er , er the failure to comply with the judgment of the declaration would be bad faith within the meaning of the act , but even assuming it 's right it puts a plaintiff suing for breach of article eighty five in the worst position possible
26 The number you have put them together in different places and as usual I got the numbers that fell of the
27 Disappointingly strawberries do not freeze so if you do not eat them at once you need to use them up in some other way .
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