Example sentences of "[pers pn] 'd think i " in BNC.

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1 ‘ On returning , I mentioned to Ronnie that if I did n't know better — having miscarried only five weeks before — I 'd think I was pregnant , ’ remembers Allison .
2 As I battled my way over or through each obstacle I 'd think I 'll be ahead of him after this — he 'll never manage this one .
3 And I used to say ooh like , you know , but then then I 'd think I used to see like , I used to say , well I said to you did n't I ?
4 I wanted to introduce myself , but I was afraid she 'd think me … ’
5 She 'd never even mentioned them and I was sure she 'd think I was unclean .
6 But if you could see me , you 'd think me but a sorry object to hobble to an altar .
7 They extended a half inch beyond my toes but the way he spoke you 'd think I was John A. ‘ Snowshoe ’ Thomson .
8 She sat bushy-tailed for the day at a table with two men , one her husband ( ‘ You 'd think I 'd know by now after thirty-eight years what he likes for his breakfast ’ ) , the other a distant cousin , I decided .
9 You 'd think I 'd given him the moon . ’
10 You 'd think I would be over this by now , ’ Mait said darkly , eyeing the lake .
11 You see , you 'd think I knew about these things would n't you , you 'd think I knew
12 You see , you 'd think I knew about these things would n't you , you 'd think I knew
13 You 'd think I 'd cut her foot off .
14 You 'd think I was round the twist if I told you .
15 You 'd think I did n't live here , too .
16 To hear her talk you 'd think I was the hired help .
17 You 'd think I was proposing to give away her share to a cats ’ home .
18 ‘ This is ridiculous — I 'm so excited , you 'd think I was five years old ! ’
19 You 'd think I
20 you 'd think I 'd never fed him !
21 If I should tell at a tea table in London , that I have crossed the Atlantick in an open boat , how they 'd shudder , and what a fool they 'd think me to expose myself to such danger . ’
22 If I told them that , they 'd think I meant daydreaming .
23 ‘ If mine got a letter from me , ’ said Rufus , ‘ they 'd think I was dying or in jail . ’
24 They 'd think I was eavesdropping .
25 I felt if I mentioned them [ the symptoms ] they 'd think I was skiving or malingering or being a hypochondriac or neurotic , and I was n't going to be labelled as those things . ’
26 He 'd think I was saying it out of spite . ’
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