Example sentences of "[pron] [pron] [vb past] [pron] [was/were] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 Erm I I 'm not sure I need to look at the sheet I I thought it was ten when I looked .
2 Someone I knew who was interested in cars . ’
3 I think , I think the other thing is as well though is that when you , I mean you 've been sitting pensions cos I mean I had the P H I which I thought it was easier to actually describe erm but erm it 's easy for us to actually sit back and , and go back on everything that everyth er everybody else did wrong is n't it , so
4 until yo you 're actually gon na do it , sort of thing which I thought it was interesting .
5 Last week I saw you in Suddenly Last Summer in which I thought you were incredible .
6 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 .
7 And how the show was now funded , how tightly Paul Lexington was running his budget , what his break-even percentage of audience was , indeed how much of the audience was made up of paying theatre-goers and how much of free seats ; all these were questions to which he knew he was unlikely to get answers .
8 Wilson was immediately worried that the rooms she had ready would not be thought adequate , that indeed she did not know if she herself thought they were adequate , and that she would be unable to prepare meals in her feeble condition , but Miss Blagden laid to rest all her anxieties .
9 I am quite convinced that everyone we met there was each other 's cousin .
10 Was the one you mentioned who was ill one of them ?
11 We we did we were lucky enough to be in the position that we were working out of Ireland we were making a living without having to work in Ireland .
12 Akram added : ‘ I do n't know why they changed the ball but I am glad they did because the one they gave us was newer and in better condition than the previous one . ’
13 If I had told him I wished he was dead he would have seen this as a palimpsest of desire , but I only wished that he was n't there .
14 When David did things that I thought were stupid , or when he did n't turn up , or he 'd turn up ‘ high ’ , I told him I thought he was stupid .
15 ‘ When I first saw him I thought he was dead .
16 ‘ And I told him you said he was married and he says it is n't true . ’
17 Southey 's seafaring brother , Tom , was an early recruit to the scheme , as was Southey 's widowed mother in Bath ( even though she told him she thought he was mad ) .
18 Deep within her she knew they were dead .
19 Then you , the way they spoke about him they thought he were brilliant !
20 ‘ When I first met him he thought I was mad because I did n't eat meat .
21 I see from this school report you 've shown me it said there were fifty seven in your class
22 Secondly , though the net price obtained by the owner of land should have been the same irrespective of whether the body to whom he sold it was private or public , some owners might have been unwilling to sell to the commission .
23 As soon as I tasted it I knew it was serious
24 When we received it we thought it was great , but after chewing on them for a while , mum got a bit worried as the pieces we were chewing off looked like hard plastic .
25 Because what I saw there was that as a single function as a single function .
26 erm but you homed in on the needs and you persisted in finding out from me what I wanted which was good and you checked very carefully on the policies in existence so yeah , considering it 's a page which erm can be a bit confusing you did very well .
27 Whatever I did I was convinced that people did n't like me , and that if only I could be slim and keep that way with sensible eating habits , they would .
28 Yes but then you see , in the ol in the old days Gordon , I mean , you we you were very fortunate if you got three meals a day and i and whatever you got you were glad of and used to eat it all .
29 This old fella had died and she took us there to choose what we wanted which was horrible .
30 What he told me was that M. Chaillot adored the company of women and would wish to charm me .
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