Example sentences of "and [pron] [verb] [prep] the [noun pl] " in BNC.

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1 Right , where 's this morning 's paper and I go to the bogs ?
2 I congratulate all those who won trophies and I commiserate with the runners up and others , in the knowledge that it may be their turn next year .
3 And I mean including the Germans , if you can drive them out .
4 The full vessels are left on the empty shore , they are for use but I am carried to the river in your arms , and I dance to the rhythms of your heart-throbs and heaving of the waves .
5 and I laughed about the onlookers asking each other ‘ Who are they ? ’ and trying to place us .
6 And I stare at the handprints on the ceiling .
7 As the Dutchwoman and I waited for the musicians to gather themselves up she commented on the sea symbols of fish and anchor in the nave .
8 ‘ I straightened my back , and I walked down the stairs to my parents and I said goodbye to them and to the servants lined up on the front steps .
9 So Joe , Mr Wopsle and I walked behind the men through the village and out on to the marshes .
10 Eva and I walked among the kids .
11 and I , I mean Jimmy it was only last Friday I went down to have me hair done and I walked from the hairdressers down to Street to get the wallpaper
12 ‘ As your commanding officer , I 'm the senior member of the Board and I speak for the others .
13 My scope increased and I cycled round the villages in search of paragraphs .
14 At midday , when we shut the shop for lunch , and I drove through the streets , it was only the river , glittering in the hard light , that seemed alive .
15 It was a drizzling spring afternoon and I paused on the steps to button my coat .
16 Of course , there was always Agnes , and I lived for the nights when I joined the Ralembergs for their simple meal .
17 I said to the farmers we s you should cut grass and you get nitrates into the water and I said to the farmers er er about their slurry throwing erm a muck across the land , we know the problems that causes , I said if we came out with fertilisers which were would you buy them if it costed a bit more .
18 But er I did two or three hundred , four hundred , five hundred a day and I got fed up on it and I said to the gaffers one day , if you do n't change me from this job I 'm leaving , so they says oh we do n't want you to do that , best filer we 've had .
19 And I refer to the directors rather than the scores of people behind the scenes at Williams .
20 Ward 's voice smashed into my consciousness and I slammed on the brakes .
21 She got in the bed to watch Neighbours and we came back about five o'clock and I went up the stairs , the T V was and he was erm out for count , so I left them for another hour and I said to mum
22 His young master brought him in repeatedly and I went through the motions , trying at the same time to make it clear that it was all hopeless .
23 Well , let me tell you , you 'll know which one it is in a second — I went back , obviously years later , and I was having my beer and I finally had to go to the loo and I went into the ladies ' room and there was a big sign saying ‘ Elizabeth Taylor sat here ’ .
24 I 'm not used to scotch and I went into the gents down by the station to be sick . ’
25 You know given that life is as it is are you okay and he said yes so I went round the gardens and I came back to him and I had a friend coming for lunch and I thought this is ridiculous , I 'm going to have something to drink and I 'm going to have a meal so I made him an enormous great wad of cheese sandwiches and some apples and a piece of cake and some biscuits and a cup of tea and I went downstairs with the milk and the sugar and cup of tea and all this stuff and I went into the gardens and this poor child he looked very defensively a second time and I said well I thought you might like some breakfast and I wrapped the second lot up so if you 've nothing later on , why not put it in your pocket and eat later in the day and I did n't know whether you took milk or sugar , so I thought I 'd better just ask you and do you know I thought he was going to cry .
26 And I went into the workshops in the depot .
27 In the autumn of 1959 I was eleven , and I went to the girls ' grammar school down the road .
28 And I went to the Magistrates and acted and and gave witness on behalf of this old gentleman .
29 I was up , and I went to the shops and I came and there 's a wee boy which used to live in the flats , and he says hello Nelly .
30 I mean I think it 's the class thing as well really , because I can remember when I was erm leaving school erm and I went to the careers erm teacher for my interview and I said I 'd like to be a journalist and she looked at me and I came from a very poor working class background in Tottenham , and she said ‘ I 'm sure you could be a secretary or a shorthand typist if you really tried ’ .
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