Example sentences of "i [verb] [pers pn] have [adv] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I 'll quickly rattle through the next one effectively nothing more has happened at Napier , they went off for their Christmas holidays about the fourth of November and came back about the nineteenth of January er , not quite as bad as that but nearly as I mean they 've even longer holidays than we 've got and we get a fortnight at Christmas and New Year
2 I it , it was , it was alright f for people wh who were used to that sort of thing but I mean they had n't all the mechanization in the mines then that they have now .
3 But whether that is acknowledged by our Friends of the Earth I do n't know because I mean they have so many stamps and seals on
4 Today I mean they , I mean when you take , years and years ago when there used to be man handling everything same as timber , I mean we had about three hundred dockers then .
5 I mean we 've always associated Forest with playing their way into the penalty area now with Rozario er with Collimore they 've got the licence or the facility just to knock long balls through the air at them .
6 I mean I had n't any worries .
7 I mean he had about four or five different shirts there .
8 No but I mean he has n't supposed to come and , you know not really .
9 And she 'd I think she had about eight , over over a period of years you know .
10 So and again I emphasize you 've not responsible for cleaning either , but Elsie just likes we ca n't stop her cleaning .
11 Do you know I calculate , I went on to him other night and I says you 've only nine week
12 He wore a sailor 's short sword by his side , and I noticed he had only three fingers on his left hand .
13 And I hope they have as much fun as we used to when we were younger . ’
14 I hope he had as good a time as I did .
15 I hear they have very cheap packages to the Gambia in January . ’
16 Well , I 've spoken about how we remember you but I know you have far more memories of being here those years ago and I know you 're really itching to get up off your seats and go and have a good look round to see where you were stationed and if it 's at all possible to see the huts , the billets or anything where you were .
17 But you really ‘ should n't have ’ — I know you have so many other things on your mind that I would hate to think I was adding to them .
18 Skipper Martyn Moxon explains : ‘ I believe we have as many good youngsters coming through our system as anybody , and they are the future of the club .
19 I suppose we had too much to drink at lunch .
20 ‘ If you 're away to glory in some sort of wilderness I suppose I have n't much option — but I must say that this is mighty strange — ’
21 This may seem to be a rather unsurprising observation , but I feel it has very important consequences for arts education , underlining as it does the unease teachers feel about examinations in these subjects .
22 Most of us went to church on Christmas Eve and on Christmas Day , and I felt I had so much for which to be profoundly thankful .
23 I knew she had this little vanity that she did n't like people to see her with her spectacles on .
24 As she told a close friend : ‘ I knew I had only one chance to get it right .
25 The black man momentarily took off his sunglasses as though to examine Ellen more closely and I saw he had very hard and very cynical eyes that were suddenly turned full on me .
26 I think they 've just all jumped on the bandwagon .
27 We had , I think we had about two ships of that , that 's all .
28 Well , I think we had much higher hopes before the Gulf crisis , I think what many people are saying now is that the peace dividend , the money that we could have saved by the end of the Cold War , will in fact , that peace dividend will be diluted by the Gulf .
29 Erm it 's now some years since the Board departed from most of its work with erm in children 's homes , I think we have only one children 's home now operating in Stonehaven .
30 I think he has more French style than the others . ’
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