Example sentences of "[conj] [verb] you [prep] the " in BNC.
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1 | The chances are that the felon who takes your car , raids your house , or robs you in the street will be no older than 15 , the national peak age for Britain 's criminal underclass . |
2 | They will either deal with your enquiry or direct you to the appropriate department in the University . |
3 | Did you start doing a passenger service when you got the mail contract or did you to the mail just on its own first or did you |
4 | That 's a tall order with the wind buffeting your back or hitting you from the side . |
5 | It had begun to rain : the kind of damp , penetrating drizzle that chills you to the bone . |
6 | Just show your Family Credit order book or , if you 're paid by direct credit into your bank or building society account , the letter that notified you of the award of benefit . |
7 | When you went to the pictures you did n't want to be reminded of the problems that dogged you outside the cinema : jobs , children , money and so forth . |
8 | I hate these people that catch you in the street ! |
9 | When I first started to explore Scotland by train , there were long spacious carriages , first and second class , with a restaurant and buffet , a guard 's van where bikes could be carried free of charge , and a service that transported you to the Highlands through snow drifts that would bury a car . |
10 | Jones revealed : ‘ A lot of people say to me ‘ that put you on the map ’ . |
11 | The main lawn and border shapes have been laid out in a flowing line that leads you through the garden , echoing the curve of the path . |
12 | You can even create subject profiles that guide you to the pages containing stories most relevant to yourself . |
13 | It is a kind of debunk manquée , not the whole hog sort that keeps you on the edge of your chair waiting for yet more astounding revelations , but in a snider kind — like those Sunday supplement interviews which are dressed up as journalistic frankness , but whose real purpose is barb and innuendo . ’ |
14 | It 's the news that keeps you on the move . |
15 | The driving force that keeps you on the road best . |
16 | Within that pack there is erm er if you like the book that takes you through the slides that have been put up there today . |
17 | • If you make a move that takes you beyond the last circle on the grid , you must count back to complete that move before continuing forward with the next move . |
18 | In doing a campaign that takes you around the country on tour you may visit the local newspaper , talk to a consumer group , make a speech over a special lunch for local important big-wigs and then do an interview on the local radio . |
19 | ‘ Than calling you at the office . ’ |
20 | It consists mainly of a diagram of the shape , plus figures that tell you about the sizes , stitches and rows . |
21 | Perhaps because no one knows better than our front-line ambassadors the warm , comfortable realm that awaits you behind the Four Seasons door . |
22 | If you go along to a good quality golf course they have the score card a planner but they also have a little script that tells you about the hole . |
23 | We had a system of telephone boxes that connected you to the bridewell . |
24 | Erm I did n't spot the tentative benefit , I do n't think you actually got that bit as far as what was gon na be in it because when erm Steve came up with the why so long I think that , that took you off the track a bit . |
25 | Regular faces that greet you in the banks , shops and offices in Funchal are to be seen on the eight-kilometre long beach of white sand . |
26 | A quick , sharp beverage that hits you in the throat and then in the guts ; that changes , perhaps only for a time , your way of seeing the world ? |
27 | I 'm afraid there 's none of that — transport , I mean — except Archie McLaren 's Land-Rover , the one that carries you from the harbour . |
28 | They was t that tried to be the strike breakers and there was several of their buses turned over you 've probably read that have you in the |
29 | But our intention is to take account of your views and address the issues that concern you at the earliest practicable opportunity . |
30 | ‘ I came to apologise for hitting you , ’ she began determinedly , ‘ and to thank you for the cheque . ’ |