Example sentences of "i [verb] [adv prt] with [pron] " in BNC.

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1 You 've got a tremendous amount to for you , not for me to go through with you ,
2 And I think you should know he wanted me to go out with him . ’
3 Perhaps the toner fluid intoxicated her — there were over a hundred sheets to copy — or maybe it was the lack of air in the photocopying room , but after we had done and she had commented favourably on the comprehensive and detailed nature of the notes , she asked me to go out with her .
4 He liked her ; but then , he was keen for me to go out with anyone , as long as they were not boys or Indians .
5 On Saturdays as a special treat Granpa would allow me to go along with him to the early morning market in Covent Garden , where he would select the fruit and vegetables that we would later sell from his pitch , just opposite Mr Salmon 's and Dunkley 's , the fish and chippy that stood next to the baker 's .
6 for the empty , unoccupied homes that makes it very difficult for me to go along with my hon. Friend the Member for Torbay ( Mr. Allason ) , who wanted the 50 per cent .
7 ‘ Look , ’ Donaldson told him outside , ‘ I 'm not being deliberately awkward , but you ca n't appear from nowhere and expect me to go along with you without an explanation . ’
8 There was a girl called Carmen , she was the queen Reject , she just let me hang around with them so she could sneer at me for being a moony .
9 Fred handed over the old bull's-eye lantern he was carrying , and asked , ‘ D' you want me to come along with you , sir ? ’
10 ‘ D' you want me to come back with you tonight ? ’ he asked her .
11 Was he waiting for me to come in with him ?
12 When he joined Ingard and wanted a number two he thought of me and asked me to come in with him .
13 ‘ Do you want me to come in with you ? ’
14 You see , we 'd got such confidence that she told me that when he died , she said , ‘ He died in his bed here ’ , that we were in , you see ; and she said , ‘ I then closed his eyes and I laid down with him till the morning so that nobody should be disturbed . ’
15 just prior to Birkdale I met up with him to play against Gary player in a televised match at St Andrews .
16 In the next week or so until I met up with him again I was suffused with wild imaginings .
17 I met up with her two and three times , to see where we 're at .
18 ‘ There are two reasons why I wanted to be sure that I met up with you after school today . ’
19 ‘ I found I got on with him reasonably well .
20 Mostly I got on with her . ’
21 And I had five sons , a disabled father , according to the media , and er , I got on with it .
22 I got on with my kitchen garden .
23 And then I got on with my job . ’
24 I got off with someone for his hat .
25 During this period of uncertainty , Jean-Claude was as anxious as I. He never missed the opportunity to tell me how different his life had become since I moved in with him : he was happy now , he could work .
26 I moved in with her immediately and changed schools ( again ) , visiting my Pop at weekends .
27 I moved in with his friend .
28 ‘ Luke , ’ she said abruptly , ‘ if I moved in with you , would you send me roses ?
29 Marie was waiting for me and when I caught up with her she linked her arm in mine .
30 I caught up with them about 3.30pm in Jackson Bridge where they were finishing a hymn , and possibly a silent prayer , before they marched back up the steep winding hill to Hepworth where a free tea was waiting for them in the school .
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