Example sentences of "could [adv] take a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 So he said that they could perhaps take a look round to see were there any secluded windows anywhere or any openings where they might just squeeze through .
2 There were no recognised Departments of Education offering a full initial teaching qualification in any community language ( other than English or Welsh ) at the time of the LITE survey : bilingual school leavers with the determination to promote their language in the British school system could perhaps take a degree by treating their home language as a foreign language where such courses existed , but the available Postgraduate Certificate in Education ( PGCE ) courses could allow them to qualify fully only if they selected a main teaching subject other than their chosen language .
3 It seems that the church could perhaps take a lead in looking at the implications of suicide , and at possible ways of providing services to try and prevent it .
4 I wonder if I could just take a step back in conclusion and ask you a couple of rather broader questions , more general questions .
5 You could hardly take a woman to her own restaurant , but because of his limited social life he knew of nowhere better .
6 The leaving present given to an ambassador could still take a variety of different forms .
7 ‘ You could always take a dog . ’
8 Could always take a dog for walk .
9 In this way she developed her instinctive talent as a fashion editor ; she could instantly take a detail from this and an idea from that , while keeping well within her overall style .
10 Having driven past in the usual manner , the driver then had to go through a second time in reverse so that the mourners on the other side could also take a look .
11 ‘ Completing your dog-training course could take a couple of months but it could also take a couple of years because of the waiting period . ’
12 With all the flowers- and the birds- and the presence of the Sea , the purity & brightness of your own heart could surely take a day nearly perfect .
13 Without that leverage , the RPF could either take a vow of self-imposed isolation ( in the hope that this would be rewarded by electoral victory in 1956 ) or risk its anti-system character by participating in parliamentary politics and even holding a share of power in coalition governments .
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