Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] [noun] [conj] [conj] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 I taped Louise and and they had to be .
2 I say advantage because if you were to close your eyes while playing , it would be impossible to say which guitar the Carlton 's neck reminded you of most .
3 If you want to stop at seventy three point six million erm pounds we 're quite happy to erm and I suggest Chairman if if we do n't get the the main er growth savings through at the next few minutes of voting that perhaps a rather longer lunch erm maybe there would be some .
4 I think I told Liverpool that if it gets to erm Caernarvon to the Caernarvon office by today it will appear in this week 's issue .
5 I told Northcliffe that if his people would make enquiries at our Central Office , he would find that our nightly regiment of speakers was at least as well worth reporting as the Radical contingent , but that I realized that from the Press point of view , no doubt , our speakers did not play up to the reporters by handing them their speeches in advance , and by other tricks of the kind to which the Radical orators have recourse .
6 I muttered thanks and as she disappeared to the kitchen I stepped up to the sitting room door , knocked rather timidly and entered .
7 Can I say that I hope Mr or or whoever writes for the County Council would n't use the form of words , but erm although I am instructed by my clients that they would be satisfied with the change to a single triangle , erm I do n't think that they would be satisfied if you in making that change , you accompanied by a form of words which said the County Council are still committed to building an outer .
8 I 'm actually , I 'm quite high on as theorist as well and I like to write everything out in full and I clear structures and if I go to training sessions and they 're all over the place , it 's such a in about five minutes and I have to say hang on a minute it might not be structured in the way that you like it but you can actually learn from it .
9 I like boxing and when I was suspended in the summer of 1990 I took up boxing and accepted , perhaps too quickly , a fight against the then French light-heavyweight champion .
10 I adored Bristol and if I had to live anywhere in the world , I would come back and live here .
11 Later I tell C that if I worked for the Daily Star , I 'd have my story already .
12 ‘ Let us suppose , ’ he said , ‘ that there is someone called Mohamed and that he was born and lived in Acre .
13 I loved dancing but as I got older I loved teaching the little ones more , ’ says Susan , a nursery nurse at Kenton Bar Primary School in Newcastle .
14 She searched my house and got information from my daughter , telling her that I was sick , that I needed help and that she would n't go to the police .
15 I told him I knew Ben and when I left Durance I went down to the harbour .
16 She said I saw Julie cos when I left Julie said to me ,
17 bit here and I thought god that so I thought right I 'm gon na change places in that seat but your father 's sitting on , alright , I said go in that back seat , just behind us there were there or I said or I 'm just coming to sit where you are , I said I ca n't do four hours sitting like this , I mean I 'd have been boss eyed before I got , well I was I , I , all say look at that cloud
18 Now I do fishing and ere we go .
19 I love rugby and if I had the opportunity I would pull on my boots and play tomorrow .
20 An and er , I mean , I love snooker but when there 's a choice of darts and snooker I always watch the darts because it 's faster , it 's more counting .
21 I enclose details and as you will see their approach is based on the informal as well as the informative .
22 ‘ They knew that I liked girls and if I had a choice , I would rather be talking to the girls than doing my homework . ’
23 I had loads but since I ai n't had none .
24 It was quite a shock to be told that I had Cancer and that I needed an operation as soon as possible .
25 I could n't do that , I mean , I had responsibilities and if I had time I 'd remember what they were .
26 That 's in the oh a lot of people did , oh yes , lot of people spent the money but I was one of the fortunate ones I had a little bit left because I mean I was , er I was very lucky myself , I mean I had a decent job at that time from time I left school and when I was on the dredging plant , I mean you take er in nineteen twenty five when er a schoolboy left school , his money was about ten shillings a week as an errand boy but I was one of the fortunate being a cabin boy on the dredger , I was getting thirty five shillings a week which was a lot of money and then after a few months they , I , they wanted another deck hand , so of course I went on there on four pound a week and then I was well off .
27 I used to have my hair shaved , now I let it grow — people react to me in very different ways when I have hair and when I do n't ’ .
28 She knows that I have arthritis and if I do need a bit of support , Clare 's always there , unobtrusively , to give me a hand .
29 Then a smiling procession of medical staff presented themselves , each of whom told Elinor that if there was anything she wanted , she had only to ask .
30 Where there is darkness let me give light and where there is sadness let me give joy .
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