Example sentences of "[art] end of my [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Thanks very much indeed Pat , and erm that brings me to the end of the lunch time phone in , in fact , the end of my stint on the lunch time phone in , because on Monday Bill will be back ; Bill Heine , so you 'll be able to join him just after the twelve o'clock news . |
2 | Although Jeff making me laugh at myself was the beginning of the end of my depression , it was n't enough to persuade me to stay . |
3 | ‘ You 've brought me very close to the end of my patience . |
4 | ‘ I 've heard that it might be some test of our will near the end of my presidency , but those F-16s sent the message to him pretty clearly . ’ |
5 | And that was the end of my baking days . |
6 | ‘ A number of things contributed to the end of my spell with BRM , ’ says Rudd . |
7 | At the end of my lawn |
8 | It 's now 2.18 and this is near the end of my diary . |
9 | I ca n't scrape you off my mind nor even , it seems , off the end of my pen . |
10 | With this drop of ink at the end of my pen , I will show you the roomy workshop of Jonathan surge , carpenter and builder in the village of Hayslope , as it appeared on the 18th of June , in the year of Our Lord , 1799 . |
11 | There was one awful incident towards the end of my sentence . |
12 | To get to the end of my story first , let me point to his last winter 's feat of equally Laurie O'Hara 's O55 Wimbledon cross-country record . |
13 | The moral of this tale you can carry away at the end of my story of two Corbetts . |
14 | This is not the end of my story . |
15 | There was much left to see by the end of my trip but ‘ traa de loor ’ , I shall just have to come back again … |
16 | I have never in my life looked forward to starting a diet , but by the end of my holiday I could n't wait to get back on it to maintain my slimmer figure ( with every other diet I have put weight back on and more ! ) . |
17 | And so the end of my holiday drew near . |
18 | The end of my teddy-tail is tickling like mad , but it is not-nice for boys to scratch down below . |
19 | Well I did we we talked about this , you see Mary Anne , half way through the conversation er Neil went out of the room so that I could to Mary Ann and I said towards the end of my conversation , you know , Mary Ann you 're a very wise person , give me some advice I said , I told her about Neil not wanting no not doing well on the driving , although he can drive she said he does n't want to do it she said do n't hassle him so when he came downstairs I said I 've been talking to Mary Ann and she sends you her love and because , of course , you know , we 've got a grandson , you know she had a son , my |
20 | The DEA 's on-going , controlled deliveries were going right past the end of my desk . |
21 | Then my adults died off , so that was the end of my chances — this time . |
22 | My voice had risen a good half-octave and my hands were waggling around on the end of my arms as though I was trying to shake off bits of Sellotape . |
23 | Well , it must have been my day as with half an hour to go I had just got to the end of my swim when the float buried and the elastic shot out . |
24 | Towards the end of my sojourn at Kinloss , and after I became the assistant to the chief ground instructor under a squadron leader , I was also seconded to the engineering wing . |
25 | At the end of my reading , the lecturer asked the newcomer his name , and I heard his voice for the first time — a soft , warm American accent , with the rich , furry tone the English find so attractive . |
26 | that would have been the end of my turn . |
27 | As I near the end of my year in office , I am pleased to report there is no doubt in my mind that we have a very stable Institute which was built on a strong foundation by our predecessors . |
28 | Elena Ceausescu At the end of my work , there is nothing but dust . |
29 | At the end of my work placement , I teamed up with two other volunteers for a three week holiday . |
30 | I ordered it at the branch of the Times Library then housed in Elliston and Cavell 's , the nearest equivalent to Harrods in the Oxford of pre-war years , and remember with what excitement I received it from their admirable librarian Miss Lush ( now Lady Ormerod ) at the end of my day 's work in the Bodleian . |