Example sentences of "[pers pn] and [pron] have [verb] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 Then you 've got yours and I 've got mine then .
2 They had done so the first time they got water for me and I had assumed they would continue .
3 Something happened and she just said it , then she hit me and I had to hit her back .
4 But they lied to me and I had to do it in English .
5 Eventually a headline from The Sun 's sports pages leapt out at me and I had to try it : Frog 's Legs .
6 I 've had a preliminary meeting with them and they 've asked me to go back because they 're interested in me .
7 While I 've been injured I 've missed them and they 've missed me .
8 So I went in and told them and they 'd given me wrong sack .
9 ‘ I have also discussed the situation with the Football League and put the full facts to them and they have given me clear advice .
10 Years ago Constance 's mother had kept chickens at the bottom of the garden , and when they went off the lay one of her sons-in-law had strangled them and she had given them away to the neighbours , being unable to eat a bird she had known personally .
11 Well the first crane I drove was a was only at that so I was stuck on one of them and I had to sling me grab all the time and this , this bridge come round and miss the bridge and go over it and rush it down to the hold .
12 I 've taken on all these issues because I believe in them and someone has to do them .
13 I was going to bring a , a poster for you and I 've forgot it .
14 It 's our duty , and you and I have done it .
15 Which you and you 've given it an extra name of mumsy S L P .
16 Simon has told me he asked you and you have given him hope .
17 He could do nothing to persuade them to join him and they had left it too late .
18 Somewhere they 've got a , there 's a picture of him and I 've named him out of one of the photos I brought over .
19 He told me that his wife had left him and she had told him that the baby she was carrying was not his . ’
20 He made as if to say something , but I just beamed at him and he had to let it go .
21 He felt that a winning hand had been dealt him and he had played it badly , perhaps even from a professional point of view .
22 In the past she had shamelessly melted towards him and he had accepted her , only to put her aside later .
23 They went to him and he had sold it as well and they could n't
24 According to Ben , she had waited for him and he had failed her ; never mind that the real fault was not his , or that he had lain at death 's door , or that he had been loath to go to her as a cripple , with nothing to offer but a life of struggle .
25 She had already told Glyn that she would never be anything but a friend to him and he had taken it better than she had thought he would .
26 Dadda 's temper , that he had inherited along with Dadda 's darkness and Dadda 's height , had got the better of him and he had attacked her , physically attacked her .
27 ‘ Then what do you think he 'll do when your cousin wo n't take her and he has to suffer it ? ’
28 Her parents were still concerned about her and she had asked them to accompany her for this first appointment .
29 Louise Dunstaple , who had once been so fair , now looked like some consumptive Irish girl you might find walking the London streets ; in spite of the angry red spots on her pale brow she no longer wore the poultice of flour … the temptation had been too much for her and she had eaten it .
30 But in Tom 's room , when Peter had poured the wine into two mugs and an inch into a glass for her and she had tasted it , she found she liked this wine that had a taste of how elderflowers smell , reversed her decision and asked him to do as he had offered and fill her glass .
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