Example sentences of "[verb] i [am/are] " in BNC.

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1 I 've I 've got your range of one to six here , John , and I 'm not I must stress I 'm not singling you out — I mean your company is fairly typical of what 's happening in this area — but the main difference between one and six is that erm two and six is that number two covers for two hundred part up to two hundred pounds
2 Perhaps he 's happy because he 's realised I 'm not going to try to hang on to him , she thought sadly .
3 ‘ I do n't think I am a born light entertainer and I do n't think I 'm a born serious political interviewer , ’ Sue explains .
4 ‘ What kind of a fool do you think I am ! ’
5 ‘ You do n't think I am going to wear that trash , do you ? ’ she had said when the great day came ; and wondered why he had ‘ got into one of his passionate tempers ’ ( poor little disappointed boy ! )
6 ‘ I mean , what do you think I am ? ’
7 — What do you think I am , anyway ? ’
8 ‘ I 'm not giving you a divorce so you need n't think I am . ’
9 He must think I am a fool .
10 I could be , but I do not think I am .
11 If they think I 'm pretty , that 's nice , I 'm complimented ; but if they do n't think I am , I have n't put myself on the line .
12 I do n't think I am fully recovered , and today I am no taller or heavier than I was when I was released from hospital in 1983 .
13 ‘ I think all the businessmen sitting around me must think I am mad .
14 I daresay you find this strange and may think I am ungrateful when after all I have been given the chance to set up for myself which is not given to many of our station but it is a surprise to me too .
15 ‘ I do n't want to say too much as people will think I am only concerned because if the new rules come into force it will mean Shelford ca n't play for us next season .
16 I would recommend a 7.50 x 16 radial fitted to your own rims or to modestly wide eight spoke rims ( I dare not tell you my preference or people will think I am biased towards Michelin ) .
17 But less discreetly , when haggling over prices in the house he could lose his temper and shout ‘ Do n't think I am hard up ’ , as he took from the cupboard a quarter pewter pot full of sovereigns ’ to flash at his antagonist .
18 I can not do not think I am can be mistaken in my belief that our meeting was also important interesting to you , and that however much you may value your seclusion
19 The last line of the book is the father asking Janet , ‘ What do you think I am ? ’ and Janet 's response to it is written by the reader .
20 But I do not think I am in the least inferior to those ‘ super-apostles ’ .
21 I do n't think I am taking this line merely because I have been corrupted by a philosophical training and can not come off the fence .
22 ‘ Oh Sally , what do you think I am ? ’
23 ‘ I do n't think I am . ’
24 ‘ That bastard , what does he think I am , his servant ?
25 ‘ Do you think I am making a mistake ? ’
26 ‘ I do n't think I am going to talk to Shaunagh again , ’ he said .
27 What do they think I am — a baby snatcher ? ’
28 ‘ And what do you think I am , honey ? ’
29 The voice that came back to him was unlike hers in tone but matched it in substance , ‘ Where do you think I am ?
30 Fearless Marie , from Elland , near Halifax , Yorks , added : ‘ A lot of girls might think I am strange , but I am still a woman and feminine . ’
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