Example sentences of "[adj] i [verb] at " in BNC.

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1 Yeah you 're right I look at the headlights .
2 Eleven I have at the back there . ’
3 I 'm sorry I yelled at you , Ruth . ’
4 " I 'm sorry I yelled at you like a fish wife .
5 Then : " I 'm sorry I yelled at you , " he said , looking away from her .
6 ‘ I 'm sorry I yelled at you last night , Dad , ’ she said .
7 ‘ I 'm real sorry I shouted at you .
8 And I 'm sorry I shouted at you . ’
9 After that I waited at the harbour until it was safe to go back to the beach without seeing the person I was dodging . ’
10 Erm erm can I just say , just on the on the basis of Mr 's map erm I think that proves the point that er that I suggested at the outset of the discussion erm on this issue , that if you look at the distribution of settlements there outside the greenbelt , there 's nothing there that suggests that any of the particular sectors ought to be discounted .
11 This I did at once with a feeling of self-importance which blinded me to the now obvious fact that she was abrogating her responsibilities and allowing them to devolve , once more , upon her eldest daughter .
12 As I write this I realize at last why it is that her face has kept coming to me in this room .
13 This I discussed at once with my Scoutmaster , who had served as an officer in the Gordons during the war and was now a schoolmaster .
14 This I wondered at .
15 Yeah I spelt it wrong I said at least I can put another N on it .
16 The other thing that was interesting I learnt at dinner on Thursday night is , under the government 's legislation within so many years , nineteen ninety four I think , they 've got to ha have reduced their market share from the original hundred percent to sixty percent as new firms come in to sell gas
17 A failed test means no progress that round , and a test failed by 30 or more means the character has slipped right back to the bottom of the stairs — anyone beneath him must make another I test at -20 to avoid being carried back down as well .
18 D' ya know what , whenever I feel guilty about spending some money now , I just think about how much I spent at home .
19 So it was that just after 8.15 on the morning of Monday , May 6th , 1929 I arrived at the Times-Herald editorial offices and found the place locked up tight .
20 Very concerned about the breakdown of law and order in the country which is very serious I feel at the moment .
21 For the first half of 1946 I remained at school , where the privileged handful of us who had won our places at Oxford and Cambridge did no work , read widely , cycled to the seaside .
22 well , if you can get on with doing that thing , sit down and look through those magazines with me and I 'll show you the prices that I can get them at retail I mean at trade , all the prices cos I 've got that two and a half thousand gallon job and that is only seventy quid , so I 'm just gon na have one of those , I 'm gon na have that with a U V A filter and eight er eight watt U V A filter which is fifty quid , that then , which is for one of those tanks which is for three hundred and fifty , but that 's not , I 've that 's
23 When I get tired I stop at green lights — I 'm always doing that .
24 All I had at the end was a sore hand and broken fingernails .
25 All I knew at that stage was that the girls had drowned in a sailing accident .
26 I am not exaggerating when I say that I was inspired by all I saw at the adult education centres in Croydon .
27 We need the money , and from all I heard at the Gaudy , Somerville still deserves it .
28 ‘ Look where it 's got us ! ’ — that was the assumption behind all I said at Diodati the other evening .
29 First of all I think at the end of the day that we all know a democracy never comes cheap , it 's erm , there are cheaper alternatives for administering decisions , but erm , but dictatorship does n't go well and therefore democracy will never come cheap .
30 ‘ I ca n't report suspicions and that 's all I have at the moment . ’
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