Example sentences of "[that] i [verb] [pron] [vb mod] " in BNC.

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31 Er and the only reason that I thought they may have been favourable , would have been based on the principle of fair play , but then erm when you think of er companies who are making profits from year to year which were in excess of the previous years , then by the time three years expired , our members could have been in a loss situation , if indeed they had n't gone forward and argued the case at domestic level .
32 We had passed so close to the Dutchman that I thought we must have run over his foot .
33 I answered my own question , and said that I thought we must be middle class , and reflected very precisely in that moment on my mother 's black waisted coat with the astrakhan collar , and her high-heeled black suede shoes , her lipstick .
34 She even told Sybil that the frog in the school pond was enchanted , and poor Sybil was in such a state that I thought someone ought to teach Mildred a lesson . ‘
35 ‘ It 's just that I thought there might be something wrong … ’
36 My Lords , er the principle of co-option has been described as by a number of Your Lordships as an extension of principal of democracy , but I call on my experience not as er of a year as er Minister for the Police under my Noble Friend Lord Whitelaw , but my three years as Minister for the Prison Service er and er in that er service , there was erm in each prison a Board of Prison Visitors and I observed during that time that the membership of the prison population was becoming increasingly black , but that the membership of the er Boards of Prison Governors was remaining stubbornly white and I er put it , I made it then that I thought there should be something to redress this balance er the system is as it were a supervised co-option , the local er Board makes a proposal and the Minister approves or does n't , but also I had to refuse five successive of proposed co-options of white members to an all-white prison board for a prison which was predominantly black in population because it was alleged there were no suitable black people available .
37 I hope you do n't mind my telling you , it 's only that I thought you ought to know . ’
38 Its just that I thought you would n't come here any more … not after last night . ’
39 ‘ The main reason that I am contacting you is that I thought you might be interested to know that John ( stage name Joan Rawson ) was awarded the Eric Rowley Trophy for the artist who has done the most for charity over the last 12 months .
40 And you look so topping in that dress that I thought you might be a sport .
41 ‘ You 're so slim that I thought you might be one of those women who are on a perpetual diet , and I dislike intensely dining with someone who eats like a sparrow . ’
42 ‘ It 's just that I thought you should n't be able to turn people out of places they 've lived in for years , it does n't make sense .
43 And I just liked reading it so much that I thought you 'd like to read it too .
44 Except that I thought you 'd understand — and perhaps I did think that you had a right to know why I feel the way I do about … about anything permanent . ’
45 Stok joined in the last three words as I said them , and then he laughed So loud that I thought he would shake some of the cracked tiles off the wall .
46 He answered prayer not in the way I sought , Nor in the way that I thought he ought , But in his own good way , and I could see , He answered in the fashion best for me .
47 ‘ The greatest irony is that I thought he could help me in my research on rape , ’ she says .
48 David and I did have conversations about it and I told David that I thought he should get an accountant , or that he should ask for an account from Tony if he had questions about where money was going .
49 The most frightening thing was that I thought it would never stop .
50 I said that I thought it would be alright and made arrangements to meet him again at the church on the following Saturday afternoon to discuss details .
51 Parting you from Jones that time does n't seem to have curtailed your ongoing little adventure — not that I thought it would . ’
52 It had been so successful , mon cher — the audience that first night was in rapture — that I thought it would run and run .
53 My son was so feeble that I thought I would lose him at birth .
54 ‘ I was n't ; it was only when I was talking about it to Gina that I thought I ought to come here and tell you . ’
55 ‘ Only that I thought I might move house in a couple of years .
56 At least I you see , with the virus I was sometimes in such a state that I thought I might have bowel cancer
57 I said that I thought I could just about get my act together sufficiently to come .
58 I started off the way I write every album — wrote a couple of songs , got a feel for the music and called up the musicians that I thought I could do the songs with .
59 I remember a go , a go with some of them that I thought I could do , but realised I ca n't do , do you know what I mean ?
60 As I was applying to art school I needed a reference so I told Vivienne that I thought I 'd ask Malcolm , since he was my employer .
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