Example sentences of "[conj] [pron] [vb mod] [verb] [verb] me " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | Do n't miss out the l or you 'll start turning me into a Parisian grocer . |
2 | I dared not tell Mamma , or she would begin to badger me again to give up my job … |
3 | Or she 'd have let me know . |
4 | Nor has Mr Roberts , or he would have told me . ’ |
5 | I decided to go up and see me doctor 'cos at the time I ‘ ad about 600 that I could 've got me ‘ ands on . |
6 | I was so innocent that in spite of our so-called training , of all the propaganda , I had never really been able to believe that someone might want to kill me . |
7 | She had been a mother of sons only and I think now that she would have liked me to call her mother ; but then , such an idea never entered my head . |
8 | I contacted my social worker and told her that I could not stay at this place and that she would have to find me a Cheshire Home . |
9 | ‘ Since you had yourself a very good motive for murdering him , I should have thought that you would wish to help me identify anyone else who had . ’ |
10 | At some point the interviewer will probably say , ‘ Is there anything that you would like to ask me ? ’ |
11 | ‘ Although I must say , Julie , ’ she added , throwing her briefcase down on to a nearby chair , ‘ I do think that you might have given me the ‘ Gypsy 's Warning ’ before I left for work today ! ’ |
12 | It is n't fair , come to that , that you should have to support me . " |
13 | I 'm very sorry , ’ said Breeze sedately , ‘ that you should have seen me in that cowardly moment . ’ |
14 | Now the N S P C C has er warned us of possible Halloween danger and er David I I missed your name there David so you 'll have to remind me what your name is . |
15 | ‘ That you 're keen to finish what you started in St Lucia , so you 'd like to rid me of my inconvenient hang-ups ? ’ |
16 | I 'd only set out again — and again — so you will have to let me come . ’ |
17 | So I got a call one day , saying that they 'd like to audition me ; they would fly me to New York and Mike Rutherford would audition me there . |
18 | No I 've been here more than five years so they 'll have to give me five week 's notice . |
19 | ‘ They gave me a part-time job , so they must have liked me ! ’ she says . |
20 | ‘ I mean that it might have taken me some time to see through your ‘ innocent abroad ’ act . |
21 | I 've got to give him such a tremendous shock that he 'll have to release me . |
22 | I could guess that he might have asked me what Gharr had asked — what I was doing on Vadinamia . |
23 | So , even though the man was a stranger and I was afraid of him , I began worrying about his being sick , and the idea that he might die made me feel quite desperate . |
24 | And I knew , out there , that he would have killed me rather than let me get away . |
25 | Nobody else really liked it , and my dad used to say that he could have sent me any old rubbish in the post and I would have liked it . ’ |
26 | As to the teaching profession , he said that he could have wished me to have obtained a less demanding post , if I wanted to write , because his experience at Highgate School had led him to believe that teaching , if conscientiously undertaken , was one of the most exhausting of occupations ; and , though I do not regret the experience , I was to discover that regarding its rigours he was right . |
27 | ‘ I ‘ m aware that he could have harmed me ! ’ she retorted . |
28 | I thought that he could have telephoned me if it were unobtainable but apparently he had n't bothered , and the sheet music was indeed not to be had . |
29 | He thought it was degenerate , that he 'd have to support me into my 30s . ’ |
30 | They decided that he 'd have to marry me . |