How To Use Take a bow In A Sentence
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Such was the rapturous applause that he was dragged out for a second time to take a bow.
Times, Sunday Times
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Take a bow and stretch your latissimus dors Position yourself in front of an open door frame, grasp the door knob with both hands and slowly bend over, leaning your weight back towards your heels.
Terry Gardner: No Gym - No Excuse: Part 1
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All those who reckoned it looked a case of the ridiculous meeting the sublime, take a bow.
The Sun
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They all deserved to take a bow.
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We English are often too modest about our own achievements, so take a bow Mike Ashley, one of the few multimillionaire sporting figures who actually looks glummer than Tiger Woods.
New generation of Premier League club owners are a breed apart | Harry Pearson
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Let the person who hatched this idea stand up and take a bow.
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Such was the rapturous applause that he was dragged out for a second time to take a bow.
Times, Sunday Times
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Lord Reith in his dinner suit, Lady Barnett take a bow.
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First, she loses physical control of her hands, and, by the conclusion of the concert, she is so immobilized that she can't even stand up to take a bow.
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Such was the rapturous applause that he was dragged out for a second time to take a bow.
Times, Sunday Times
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I wondered if it might take a bow, but it didn't.
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I don't think you should take a bowshot at a running deer.
The running shot
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All those who reckoned it looked a case of the ridiculous meeting the sublime, take a bow.
The Sun
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Such was the rapturous applause that he was dragged out for a second time to take a bow.
Times, Sunday Times
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When James came on to take a bow, never before had Maugham heard ‘such an outburst of boos and catcalls’.
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There was an ancient cottage smothered in yellow roses where homemade lemonade and scones magically appeared at our table; tearooms at the back of farm shops piled high with local delicacies; cafes in the quiet back streets of somnolent towns; a National Trust teashop at a lovely red-brick Georgian mansion and the largest monastic ruins in Britain (take a bow, Beningbrough Hall and Fountains Abbey); and no end of rustic pubs.
Roller coaster: a cycle trip across northern England