Example sentences of "[vb infin] with [pers pn] [conj] i [verb] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 But there 's something else I must discuss with you before I leave . ’
2 ‘ We have ways of finding out , and we will cooperate with you as I said , regardless of whether you choose to help us .
3 Will you dance with me if I come ?
4 I wondered what she was doing , if she was all right , what I 'd do with her when I got home …
5 She 'll stay with me while I swim , then we 'll take a cup of tea together before she goes — ’
6 Will you stay with me until I go to sleep ? ’
7 I 'll leave , I , I wo n't stay with you cos I do n't want you get too
8 I 've wondered whether we ought to separate but every time I bring this up , he cries and then worries about the 50 per cent of ‘ his ’ assets I 'll take with me if I do decide to go !
9 without protest from a parent , without a protest from a hunter without a protest from er a anyone else , that is a shame , because I tell you what , if you go drag hunting , you can keep the jobs the people are still going to have to shoe the horses traders and people like that are still going to have to produce the carriages to take the horses with them and the only people job jobs are in jeopardy are not the kennel staff it 's the terrier men and to be quite honest , ladies and gentlemen , it 's the terrier men who have actually ruined your sport , cos of what they get up to in nineteen ninety three is a disgust and at the end of the day your P R has been absolutely wrong and I hope this afternoon that Conservatives and Liberals can join with us and I 've got to thank a certain Liberal because he 's he 's put his head on the block on several occasions on this when we stood on the platform as individuals , not as politicians , as individuals on this and I think that this afternoon we 've got a way forward , we can say to the hunt , come and talk you change , we 'll give you access .
10 ‘ So when he told me he had to go back home to Fyn to meet someone , but that I could go with him if I wanted , I gave him an ultimatum . ’
11 I 'll walk with you once I 've taken Theresa home . ’
12 ‘ Then he can come with me while I run these groceries round to Marbury Road .
13 You can come with me when I leave the office . ’
14 ‘ My mother can come with us until I find her a suitable companion . ’
15 Yes , yes , well I am too , and that we shall pay the penalty later on if we do n't get with us and I feel that erm , as difficult as the budget is , as tight as it is with reduction etcetera , I feel that we should make a positive funding for prevention or something , or er , because I think unless we do start somewhere , and quickly , we are going to pay the penalty at the end of the and so we 've got to make a date , you 've got to make a year , and if you wait and say and well we have n't got it now , well next year we shall say we have n't got it now , and the next year we 'll say we have n't got it now .
16 ‘ Suppose I give it to him and he can play with it while I eat ? ’
17 He invited me to go and live with him and I did .
18 that people were leaving the country. , my friend wrote to my niece in One House and asked her if I could live with her until I got fixed up in a home .
19 Maybe it 's not easy to see what all this has to do with cancer , but you must bear with me if I tell you that it has .
20 I hope that hon. Members will bear with me if I paint a brief picture of my own borough of Shrewsbury and Atcham in Shropshire .
21 ‘ They probably do ’ , he said , ‘ but I ca n't let them cry with me when I 've got a queue of people ’ .
22 I do n't think any will argue with me when I say that McAllister , like he 's playing now , is the absolutely best midfield player in England .
23 I love the Christmas services , but I did n't argue with him because I know he means to get rid of me one way or another .
24 The feelings of the young hon. Member for Gedling ( Mr. Mitchell ) about the way in which local government has broken up were expressed subjectively and I suspect that he will not agree with me when I say that they seemed to date from about 1979 — and we know what happened in 1979 when the hon. Member for Finchley ( Mrs. Thatcher ) was first elected .
25 were n't gon na part with them till I got one !
26 Er reimbursement for expenses so petrol , postages that sort of thing , but the time of running around you ca n't get back , which is one of the factors that back to the old Which magazine they never deal with this say yes you can deal with it and I read some person that says it only took me forty hours , yes forty hours at legal rates , well that would be a big bill .
27 If it 's the problem over at Barton 's , I can deal with it when I get back . ’
  Next page