Example sentences of "took [pron] for grant " in BNC.
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1 | The women who were working there looked at me in a kind curious way at first and then took me for granted . |
2 | She took them for granted , of course . |
3 | Owen normally took them for granted . |
4 | She took you for granted , as though she 'd always known you , that was really what it was . |
5 | If anything , we were too extravagant in the late 1980s when money was rolling in — we took everything for granted . |
6 | Britain took him for granted . |
7 | She said I did n't appreciate her , I took her for granted , I did n't notice all the little things she did and that I sulked if she made the slightest mistake . |
8 | Everyone took it for granted that it must be Oxford or Cambridge . |
9 | They took it for granted that this was Ramsey . |
10 | She took it for granted that they talked about ‘ the handover ’ . |
11 | They took it for granted that the international world was one of competing powers and that their duty was to make the most of whatever assets were available to them . |
12 | The church found it hard to enforce chastity within marriage when a pagan man took it for granted that he had the right to sleep with his slavegirls . |
13 | Almost all philosophically minded people of Clement 's age , except for only a tiny handful of Epicureans , took it for granted that the order of the world reflects a designing providential hand . |
14 | Without such a stimulus , Libyans lived comfortably enough with Truth ; that is to say , they took it for granted , and ignored it . |
15 | Even Crosland took it for granted , in trying to disarm those critics who argued that comprehensives would damage standards , that pupils who would have gone to grammar schools would of course still be taught with those of their contemporaries who would also have gone to grammar schools . |
16 | Until recently , they took it for granted that their supplies from domestic sources could be obtained on credit and that , when these bills matured , any shortage of funds would be made good by the banks . |
17 | The reality surprised me at first , and then like everyone else , I took it for granted . |
18 | ‘ I used to see and feel things in the house , but being a child I just took it for granted that everybody else was seeing and feeling the same things . |
19 | Barney took it for granted Yanto would have a cup , and made a signal to his wife through the kitchen window . |
20 | ‘ I would n't mind , ’ she explained , ‘ but they just took it for granted that she would go back to work and I would look after the baby , without even asking me . ’ |
21 | I took it for granted that I could associate with people from all walks of life , from every background . |
22 | Jack had gone to India soon afterwards , and although Susan wore no ring they were definitely engaged , and everyone took it for granted that they would marry as soon as circumstances would permit . |
23 | Medieval law was indeed profoundly conservative , and most medieval vassals took it for granted that the right of resistance was a law which could not be abrogated . |
24 | He took it for granted that people would fall in love with Eva . |
25 | She took it for granted that each knew who the other was , and standing aside to motion him in she said : ‘ It 's good of you to be so accommodating , Mr Dalgliesh . |
26 | ‘ There was such an incredible level of will involved , ’ reflects Rowland , ‘ and we just took it for granted that we were , like , better than everybody else by about 50 million miles . |
27 | Ruth saw at once that her grandfather was not in the room , but she took it for granted that by some miracle he had improved enough to get upstairs and was resting in bed . |
28 | Personally , I would go further : employers who took it for granted that this was exactly what they were doing should not be open to fresh claims from the DSS . |
29 | He found himself unexpectedly touched by her simple assumption , the way she absolutely took it for granted , that he was innocent . |
30 | Harriet walked home wondering why she had not organised something of this sort before and marvelling at Mrs Rafferty 's complete acceptance of her own role in the community , one in which she obviously took it for granted that she herself had no need or right to ‘ a bit of a break ’ . |