Example sentences of "[modal v] [verb] me [adv prt] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 You must drive me back to the airport .
2 ‘ If the boy 's good , we 'll be delighted to see him here , but he must get me out of the side . ’
3 ‘ It 'll keep me out of the pub , dear , ’ said Jay .
4 I ask him if he 'll take me over to the Lennox 's in his car .
5 I 'm not telling you where I am ; you 'll only tell Angus and he 'll tell the police and they 'll take me back to the fucking hospital . ’
6 You 'll pick me up at the flat as usual on your way into town this evening , Rory ? ’
7 Ye 'll find me down on the quay looking at her .
8 And dad could knock me off on the way to get the papers .
9 ‘ He 'd track me down through the credit cards I use , ’ she said .
10 ‘ I expect you 'd like me out of the road .
11 Maybe you 'd walk me down to the Shelbourne for a taxi ? ’ he asked Jack .
12 He 'd chain-smoke a couple of Merits while we chatted about what had happened since our last meeting and then he 'd hand me over to the guy in the room next door for a routine polygraph .
13 I walked to the nearest telephone box and asked the operator if she could put me through to the refuge — I did n't have a single penny .
14 I had an idea I could hide out there for a while , maybe rest up , maybe make a connection who could get me out of the City .
15 I wondered if you 'd help me out in the garden , perhaps like if it 's still nice when you come home from school ?
16 Skipper Kim Barnett tells me : ‘ There was a time when the opposition used to like me out of the way quickly because I had a reputation for getting after the bowling .
17 " Mum used to send me down to the job centre for jobs .
18 An Aberdeenshire small farmer had retired , but onto a seven-acre croft where ‘ they used to always have fences to mend and trees to cut down ; ’ ‘ he used to take me round on the barrow , when he was cuttin' down trees . ’
19 It was Edna , my nursemaid , who used to take me down to the beach where we lived .
20 Just as a kid he would lift me up on the m up on the er counter , you know and me I was born in and then we shifted to the bottom , you know that white house , I think it 's all offices now , in the the erm big gates of the cathedral .
21 The conductor would send me round to the front with my fishing box , the driver would send me back to the conductor 's end and so it went on .
22 The conductor would send me round to the front with my fishing box , the driver would send me back to the conductor 's end and so it went on .
23 ‘ Creeping up to 40 was n't the main reason I wanted a third child , ’ says Saskia , ‘ but I was certainly aware that it would keep me back in the young-mum sphere along with the 25-year-olds . ’
24 At one point I would have to answer a long-distance phone call , which would keep me out of the room for half an hour .
25 He stopped and said he would take me back to the Hall .
26 ‘ I could n't see too well with my contact lens cataracts , and the crew would walk me over to the wheelchair where they had to wheel me on to the sound stage .
27 When I changed buses there was just time to get the sweets and bananas — the bananas were very good today ; and on the other bus there was a nice driver who said that if I sat near the front he would let me off at the crossing if he was held up in the traffic , instead of my going on to the bus stop and having to walk back ; because of the rain . ’
28 ‘ I wondered if you would drive me down to the town in the van . ’
29 A job would get me out of the house a lot and provide me with much needed money .
30 And a job would get me out of the attic .
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