Example sentences of "[pron] [noun] [subord] i [verb] her " in BNC.

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1 Suzie touches my fingers as I leave her .
2 I ground my teeth as I watched her crawl back into the machinery .
3 In fact as soon as I walked in I was n't allowed to go to my desk until I promised her I would get the computer out
4 She will not understand my joy when I hug her ; when I dance and crush their hands with gratitude .
5 Some some of them were never in t I well I did n't know my aunt when I met her with a hat on .
6 When I met her at the airport after she flew in to London from Los Angeles recently , I caught my breath when I saw her because she just looked so lovely .
7 I do n't want that to happen to my daughter so I smacked her for stealing and lying . ’
8 Yes I , after I lost my daughter I had to go into erm , into the factory to make aeroplane pieces at Burnt Mill cos I was so bad with my nerves after I lost her , er just afternoons I had to go and then I was taken ill I could n't do it , well then after my erm , I got my family off to school I took a part time job in erm one of the factories making tea in the mornings for the office and coffees and that for the office and then in the afternoons I used to do the tea as well , I used to cycle there , I quite enjoyed it until my right hip started coming bad then I had to pack it in , but I was in there , I was there for about four years and I thoroughly enjoyed it you know making tea and that , I did n't have to take it round only collect the money to go round and collect the money , but used to have to put the trolley outside and they used to come and get their tea each one , of which they knew which was their mugs and cups ha , you know , I , I thoroughly enjoyed that job , really great
9 So did my mother when I told her .
10 But as a preview , this was her reply when I asked her whether the problem was , not whether women needed more education , but that men needed educating about women .
11 And she has n't got a box by her bed cos I bought her some the other day and she does n't know .
12 I wanted to hear more of her life so I asked her why she had left London to come to Birmingham .
13 went up five pounds , my sister done her nut till I told her how much ours was .
14 No sisters until mother got married again , and me sister as I call her now , she 's me of course my half sister , Jessie , she was born I 'd be about seventeen cos she did n't get married till after the First World War , remarried me step-father was in the forces and he fought , he actually fought in the Boer War so he was a a soldier in the Boer War and in what we call the Great War , nineteen fourteen to nineteen eighteen , but er I had a misfortune to lose the brother next to me , Frank , which he had what was common in those days tubercular trouble , tubercular tuberculosis affected the bowels , see he died in , on August the fourth nineteen eighteen in the old infirmary that now classed as the Manor Hospital , but that was the old infirmary cos we there was no widow 's pension in those days , our mother was a bridle stitcher and she used to do have an old fashioned clamp , have you ever seen the clamps that are leather , th tha they held them , the leather , she used to stitch bridles at home , we used to help her with waxing the threads have a leather apron and a bit of wax and pull the wax over the thread , and then roll it round till it was strong enough to thread it , we used to make the threads for her to er stitch the bridles .
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