Example sentences of "[verb] me like " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
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1 | It would be very comfortable , but they 'd be surprised to see me like that at the Queen Elizabeth Hall . ’ |
2 | He thought to himself ‘ I do n't want him to see me like this ’ . |
3 | ‘ How dare he answer me like that ! ’ |
4 | ‘ You shall paint me like this if it would please you , Barney dear , ’ she whispered aloud . |
5 | That does n't make me like him ! ’ |
6 | I was just old enough to become crazy about cowboy films , but even handsome Buck Jones could n't make me like Auntie Julie any better . |
7 | It does n't , it does n't affect me like my dad says it should . |
8 | It 's just great to have Marie touching me like this . |
9 | He 'll be sorry he 's treated me like this , Ellen ! ’ |
10 | You ca n't treat me like that . |
11 | ‘ You need not treat me like a half-witted child ! ’ |
12 | ‘ How can you treat me like this after all I have sacrificed for you ? ’ |
13 | ‘ I would n't let him treat me like that . ’ |
14 | You ca n't treat me like this ! |
15 | Do not treat me like an idiot . ’ |
16 | But please , Mama , Lucinda pleaded silently , do n't treat me like a complete idiot . |
17 | ‘ Why ca n't he treat me like a good-time girl , ’ wailed Babs . |
18 | I know total-total that if I had my own bike , the Wheels-and-brakes Boys would n't treat me like that . |
19 | ‘ My dear officers , ’ said a rather breathless but still well modulated voice , ‘ of what am I accused that you should treat me like the nucleus of a civil rights demonstration ? |
20 | If you do love me , how can you treat me like this ? |
21 | That means you can treat me like this . |
22 | Do n't treat me like a naughty schoolgirl . |
23 | We 've decided now that you you must n't treat me like a chi child . |
24 | Hazel , Hazel thinks you should n't treat me like a child ! |
25 | You seemed to be drawing me like a magnet , and there was Claudine , anyway . ’ |
26 | When I did find her , she always managed to evade me like a will-o'-the-wisp , and then I would lose her again . |
27 | She said thoughtfully , ‘ I suppose I 'm just gullible , allowing a man 's sheer showmanship to affect me like that . ’ |
28 | But I will not be ordered this way and that , she said , I will do the work in my own time , as I choose , for my sister has no right to treat me like a maid , to give orders and expect me to run her errands . |
29 | ‘ My mother used to treat me like a stranger , ’ he reflected . |
30 | ‘ Apart from an occasional tendency to treat me like the ayah she had in India as a child , she 's the perfect landlady . ’ |