Example sentences of "[pron] [vb mod] [vb infin] her out " in BNC.

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1 Rab said , ‘ I 'll send her out tae the chemist . ’
2 Look , ’ he added , taking hold of Robyn 's arm , ‘ if ever she starts on you like that again , just bring me into it — I 'll sort her out . ’
3 I 'll get her out in the middle of the workshop , then you can have a good look around her . ’
4 I 'll get her out of their clutches somehow . ’
5 I 'll take her out more , ’ Erika thought , and then realised that she might not be around to do so .
6 I wo n't be able to talk much in the workshop , what with everyone around and all those cherry trees to fix , but I 'll ask her out after , for a coffee or something .
7 I 'll let her out I 'll put her out .
8 I 'll let her out I 'll put her out .
9 I do n't believe in wasting time , so if Fran is free for lunch I shall take her out and we can get down to the first lesson . ’
10 I can sort her out for myself .
11 If I close this week with only seven , I may only end up with one sale , and that 's not gon na to give me the income I want and big H wants so I can take her out for a Chinese .
12 For a heart-constricting moment she wondered if somebody would catch her out .
13 She stopped in the shelter of a stone wall , drank a cup of coffee , consulted the map and decided to aim for a twenty-five mile circuit which would bring her out , eventually , at the foot of the steep hill near the village .
14 This was the first time in her life that she 'd been in the company of a man who could bring her out in nervous flushes , make her heartbeat race and her stomach turn all watery , just by watching her …
15 Maybe you could take her out to one of those stables around Mr Morgan 's farm .
16 It was a nice yarn of respectable girl from despicable family , married to a stuffed shirt who would cast her out into the snow if a breath of suspicion fell on his name .
17 We 'll send her out with a list then .
18 We could sort her out together .
19 So , likely , they 'll farm her out to somebody and she 'll be put to work , probably as a runner in one of the mills . ’
20 To provide a university education for her might mark her out as a favoured pupil .
21 She had been destroyed before they could get her out of the police cell .
22 Clara could not count the times she had heard her mother declare that when she died she would be dead , and she would n't care what happened to her body , and for all site cared they could put her out for the dustman to collect sentiments which from the first had filled Clara with a vague alarm and horror , for they were clearly reasonable enough in their own way .
23 In the end she saw the giant fish-hooks come down down into her and she thought they would haul her out of the depths , but they did not .
24 A suggestion that he should take her out to lunch , instead , did n't , surprisingly , fall flat .
25 There 's never a minute when he 's in the house that he 'll let her out of his sight . ’
26 Occasionally he 'll take her out to lunch .
27 Had she hoped that Simon would alert Vitor to her presence , and that he might search her out , explain he had rethought and declare undying love ?
28 It occurred to her that he could tip her out of the window without any effort at all , and she shrank back .
29 If he could break her out of it , she 'd be all right .
30 Pete suggested that in a few days ' time he could take her out to the nearest big town on the coast , and there she could look for clothes in the department stores and check out the library for the addresses of any useful organisations or people to contact .
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