Example sentences of "i [verb] [adv prt] [prep] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 My hon. Friend is a charming relative newcomer to this place and we are delighted that she is here , but if she had been here as long as I have — getting on for 18 years now — she would have heard me banging on about exactly that point .
2 There was more of an opportunity for me to stand out over here , particularly as there is no real heavyweight contender on the British scene since Bruno lost to Tyson . ’
3 ‘ On April 1 and I met up with once again to do the voice-over for our film at the BBC studios in Manchester .
4 As always I got up at once so that I might cherish the ninety minutes until we assembled for work — minutes that were mine — not the authorities .
5 But apparently they know that I 'm really forward which is absolute , actually not very true cos Ed said that I was quite forward and he , I was only forward with him because the person I got off with just before him was bloody forward and it made me a bit forward but I calmed down after that , you know ?
6 I got out at 5am and left .
7 good morning ladies and gentlemen the three main items I got out of yesterday was the er structured thought patterns the cluster and the playback
8 So in summary the three main things I got out of yesterday were the structured thought patterns the playback and the audience contact .
9 I moved up to there , and I want to bring everybody up to my new level , so I sort of drag everybody up , but I always thought it was just the , the inertia effect , you know , that I could n't have a mental and physical and moral energy to last everybody out wh , while they would change effectively .
10 I phoned up from there last night , ’ said Gazzer , talking mainly to stop himself thinking .
11 ‘ Marie , I phoned up from there last night . ’
12 I want out of here . ’
13 I want out of here , ’ she said , ‘ and I want out of here now . ’
14 ‘ I want out of here , ’ she said , ‘ and I want out of here now . ’
15 I want out of here , ’ she said again .
16 No , I hold on in there till the last moment .
17 The defensive manoeuvre behind it is something like this : if I do n't acknowledge that this thing has happened then I do n't have to believe it is true ; I wo n't have to understand what has occurred if I hold off from consciously realizing that it has happened .
18 I woke up at about nine o'clock this morning .
19 I applied to correspondence courses for writing , I joined a music workshop , and at the same time I had to rush into a job , as I came over with just one bag and no money . ’
20 The one I came up with eventually was ‘ indescribable ’ .
21 I came down with quite a thud , and hit my head on the stair post . ’
22 I came back at once .
23 I came back at about eight this morning in time to get his breakfast and found the dog outside the back door , whining . ’
24 I expect , cos when I came back from there nobody could understand me .
25 When you did n't call , I came back in here . ’
26 Martin and I came back in together for a verse to give Bunny a lead in on his clarinet for three or four choruses and he was good , but probably barely audible above the traffic .
27 I came out of there . ’
28 Well erm I actually stopped smoking about er , two years ago and was quite surprised at the amount of weight I put on in about five months , which was two stone , which I did n't think I 'd deserved !
29 Well it 's , I put down on here that er , it 's a benefit for customers that possibly their shops close half day where they can have collections , er sorry deliveries in the morning so that they 've got benefit of having deliveries A M
30 ‘ All right , ’ she said slowly , ‘ let's suppose I walk out of here .
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