off our handsの例文
- They were grateful to take a piece of junk off our hands.
- Now take him off our hands . "'
- "It will get him off our hands, " he said.
- Or better yet, take them off our hands and house them in federal prisons.
- Why not take them off our hands?
- "The bonding companies are effectively taking it off our hands, " he said.
- But Dr . Swift, who taught radiology classes at the hospital, took it off our hands.
- So slow a learner they used to write to his mother to come take this kid off our hands.
- :Do you mean how much would the US have to pay Canada to take Chicago off our hands?
- We tried it, and now we can't keep our hands off our hands, so supple are they.
- They're willing to take problems off our hands, but they also want Ron ( Mercer ) or Chauncey ( Billups ).
- We should count ourselves lucky that one man has been willing and able to take the financial burden off our hands for so long.
- Or maybe the Fang family will take Florida off our hands if we give them a few billion dollars to finance the annual chad harvest.
- "But let's not cut off our hands and heads and feet and hurt the entire body because the entire nation will suffer ."
- The Secretary of State for Defence, John Nott, felt that the only course of action was to " get him off our hands as soon as possible ".
- "But let's not cut off our hands and heads and feet and hurt the entire body because the entire nation will suffer, " he said.
- "It means we're finally getting the ghosts of Vietnam off our hands, " said Saul Lockhart, of Hong Kong's South China Morning Post.
- "They brought forward a large piece of wood on which they started cutting off our hands and fingers and feet, " said Alhaji Tejan Cole, a villager from the Kono area.
- "They brought forward a large piece of wood on which they started cutting off our hands and fingers and feet, " said Alhaji Tejan Cole, a villager from the Kono area who recalled the wrath of the fleeing rebels.
- The Fangs would " take The Examiner off our hands, " but because they believed it " was not viable on its own . . . a cash subsidy would be required for them to be able to operate the Examiner as a daily newspaper ."