Example sentences of "[verb] [conj] i [verb] [pron] [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ I do n't know that I like it exactly . |
2 | ‘ I do n't know that I want it anywhere . ’ |
3 | I found that I put them back into their correct order with ease and , for the first and last time , achieved some distinction in the marking . |
4 | Erm I do n't know if I told you before , I hated any sort of games . |
5 | I do n't know if I 've one up there ? |
6 | She apparently told her sometime lover , Marlon Brando , ‘ I do n't know if I do it right ’ and Norman Mailer , another to enjoy her favours , was quoted as saying that the screen goddess was ‘ pleasant in bed , but receptive rather than innovative ’ . |
7 | ' I do n't know if I want it now . ’ |
8 | ‘ Will the generator object if I keep it on ? |
9 | Well sometimes when I was asking you things like erm say if I asked you how many quarters to make a whole one ? |
10 | I 've tried it sometimes , never long enough to know whether I did it successfully or not , but I found there is absolutely no way of telling because even if it changes in a way one can predict , what one can predict is the way oneself changes or the world changes at the same time . |
11 | Well I , I , did see it , I think , I do n't know whether I put it on , just look , look on the window sill and then |
12 | tax paid and everything , and I know it 's gon na be in there I said now that to me is worth a lot I ai n't got ta worry whether there 's gon na be cheque from out on my doormat in the morning or if it 's gon na bounce when I put it in so I sa |
13 | JH : Something that Frans Brüggen mentioned when I met him recently [ see JH 's interview , CDR 9/91 — Ed. ] was the still prevalent post-Paganini reversal of performing interest , whereby the difficult appears effortless , and the facile of monumental significance . |
14 | ‘ But whatever it is I do n't think that I need it now . ’ |
15 | H I mean I 'm really talking about the high number of post sixteen special needs people Gail has , has to see that I mean they probably exist in other |
16 | I hate that I cause her so much pain . |
17 | In the end , my knitting was getting so chewed with all the knitting and unravelling that I took it off on waste yarn . |
18 | ‘ Why have I always felt that I knew you before ? ’ |
19 | The performances on this new disc are first-rate ; indeed they are so polished that I found myself occasionally longing for something with a little more humanity and which more faithfully reflected what were in all probability the more rough-and-ready sounds of the Kürbs-Hütte clientele . |
20 | She was being strangled and I pulled him off . |
21 | Wait until I let you through into the last cellar , and then I must take the keys back to the steward . |
22 | ‘ You wait until I get you home , young lady , ’ she said on the radio . |
23 | I put and I crossed it outside . |
24 | How would you feel if I told you there was a girl going to have a child of mine — some other girl , some stranger ? |
25 | ‘ Your head will probably improve if I tell you where you are — and who I am , ’ he began conversationally . |
26 | As soon as he got out and about he was going round the house looking for you and then he just stood at the bottom of the stairs and banged until I took him upstairs and he could have a look round up there and then he realized you were n't there |
27 | He said it was clear to him you were pining away , and that you could only be saved if I took you away and made love to you for the rest of our lives . ’ |
28 | I 'm just going to read one that 's already been published and it does n't matter if I read it again . |
29 | Wait till I tell him how you put down that old harridan . ’ |
30 | Wait till I put something on . |