Example sentences of "[adj] that i [verb] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 Well , the gravestone certainly stands by the porch and it does have a hole drilled through it , said to have been where the iron stake was hammered through the stone into the coffin , but I 'm afraid that I agree with the general consensus voiced around the bar of the Sun Inn and the George and Dragon that George Hodgson was guilty of nothing but old age , that the only thing he sucked were his gums , and that the hole in the stone was made for a railing or gatepost .
2 I mean it 's about sort of you know in it 's about increasing the erm where we are within our own particular sphere and it 's far too much I mean people it 's interesting that I mean for the , it seems to me an and once again correction but it seems to me the last five years the empowerment thing was really strong and now managers are moving away from it and saying it 's jargon as a means of diluting it .
3 When I got indoors I was still so upset that I tore off the frock , ripping a sleeve in the process , but I did n't care ; I was so angry .
4 It began to prey on my mind so much that I went to the casualty department of Charing Cross Hospital .
5 One day , in one of these tiny streets , with shops on either side and with stalls of street vendors in front of them , the way was so crowded that I got to a place where it was impossible to move .
6 It is the interactional that I examined in the chapter in some detail .
7 ‘ Sometimes I 'm so frustrated that I sit on a rock and shout my head off .
8 Jo Spence I think it was then I was ill that I understood for the first time what it was to be a victim .
9 There are times when I go down to the beach at The Pit and I 'm the only surfer down there and I 'm so frustrated with it all that I sit on a rock and shout my head off .
10 I bought all that I needed for a laboratory , and sent everything to Scotland .
11 This oath of secrecy I found so oppressive at first that I felt like the barber in the Greek myth who had to dig a hole in the ground and whisper , ‘ Midas has asses ' ears ! ’
12 It was in September 1953 that I arrived as a new boy at Woolverstone Hall School and it may be that Ray was also new to the school .
13 Casements on eternity , these great patient masterpieces ought to calm the mind and nourish the spirit , but seldom do , and its rare that I emerge from the National Gallery feeling I have really taken advantage of what 's on offer .
14 But if I were to find such a change taking place while an animal is learning , unless the conditions for that change met all the subsequent criteria , I would be no further forward than the experiments of the 1960s that I criticized in the last chapter .
15 But I was surprised that I got round the room , cos I 'm awful at remembering names I think I 'm gon na have to try and
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