Example sentences of "[verb] them [adv prt] [conj] they " in BNC.

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1 If they are a pain the cast will throw them out and they 'll return to the factory they came from . ’
2 Bring them in and they want to change things .
3 er , and then bring them back when they 're ready .
4 He laid them out like they were a pack of cards spread out around him for a game of patience .
5 Er I met them in when they were on holiday and that 's how I got in .
6 And they says , Well a person who lived in your flat before you had a telly , you know and they gave me some excuse , you know that the the the person who lived in here before me had ripped them off and they says , How do we know that you 're not that person , you know things like that .
7 And i thought , right , I think I 've just about got time to nip home and fetch that fire wood and pick them up when they you see ?
8 I 've got some bits in there for her a few kittens in there for a couple of days I , so they 'd go up , pick them up and they get left
9 He successfully fought them off and they fled empty-handed .
10 They make them up as they go along .
11 They make them up as they go along .
12 And they entertained us and then some carol singers came and we asked them in and they sang carols and the food was nice and everybody really was very happy and that was the start of our Christmas holiday .
13 If it started to snow , say at four o'clock , we would have what we called snowmen — and we would knock them up and they would come running to get a day 's work in the snow .
14 Send them back where they came from , ’ the porter said to no one in particular , following it with an obscenity .
15 Then you can just chop them off as they become constants .
16 We want them back because they are part of our livelihood .
17 The buil the I 've rung them up and they said they 'd do it .
18 Tribe caught them up as they were attacking a pair of two-seaters which were climbing away from the British Line , if there still was one , having just bombed an artillery position .
19 Cos Alan beat them up and they
20 We hurry them on when they want to stop and look at some new marvel .
21 ( Another small trap containing a small band of musicians did n't catch them up until they were on their way back ! )
22 They passed us , waited for us to catch them up and they 're behind us again . ’
23 Well I do n't know , whether they 're trying to catch them out but they they certainly coming down more and more an and sort of more and more frequent .
24 We had two statements before us : Teddy Mayer 's of McLaren , who had asserted that drivers were ‘ just interchangeable light bulbs : you plug them in and they do the job ’ and Bernard Ecclestone 's classic , ‘ no driver is worth more than $25,000 ‘ .
25 picking them up before they fall .
26 Other people went inside , including the Ackerleys , but Vernon knew Stella would hide in a cupboard or show them up if they were bold enough to enter .
27 For governments , large operators can offer reassurance that they will still be in business when today 's disposal facilities have been closed , to monitor them and ( if necessary ) pay to clean them up if they go wrong .
28 If you cut them back when they reach a manageable height they 'll retain their shape but will sprout a forest of shoots at the top .
29 I would n't be filling them up if they were n't blank , are they all blank ?
30 He went among the beggars who congregated in tube-station entrances , looking them over as they sat hunched and huddled on steps .
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