Example sentences of "she [conj] i [verb] [vb pp] " in BNC.

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1 If she or I had taken more trouble I might have been convinced that all religious people were cruel hypocrites .
2 My sister still lives in Berkhamsted , where she and I had grown up and where she and John had subsequently made their home .
3 ‘ There is a feeling of deliverance within me and it is as if she and I had stopped being two , and were united for ever and ever . ’
4 For a couple of years she and I had knocked around the Mediterranean , then I had sailed her across the Atlantic .
5 And it 's not as if she and I have had to deal with really bad cases — like those men who go regularly for facials .
6 I still have n't given , that 's reminded me seeing Shona there , I , I do n't think I 've given her that pair of trousers and the sweatshirt and I told her that I 've got them .
7 So , with this weird combination of reluctance and eagerness , I confessed to her that I 'd made a copy of my cock and a cock tracing and that I 'd put them in her in-box late one night and then thought better of it .
8 I wanted to tell her that I had told Syl I would n't marry him , but I did n't , for I felt that once I had told Lili she would somehow prevent me from recanting and that , freed from Syl , I should be bound even tighter to my mother .
9 ‘ Perhaps I wanted to convince her that I had found a replacement for her and she was wasting her time in trying to fan burned-out ashes to life . ’
10 I told her that I had finished constructing the new kite , and that she could help me test it in the wind .
11 I told her that I had had a sort of a breakdown , and that I was appalled by what I had done .
12 I then reassure her that I have forgiven her , although I am aware that the word ‘ forgiven ’ implies that I have absolution in my gift .
13 And if Matey complains about their rapid disappearance you may tell her that I have developed a passion for them ! ’
14 I might have felt a little downcast at that point , only the evening had made me feel more encouraged about my prospects with her than I 'd felt for some time .
15 ‘ I would never have taken her if I 'd thought it would upset her . ’
16 I could give it to her if I 'd had it .
17 to her and I 've seen her laugh
18 that people were leaving the country. , my friend wrote to my niece in One House and asked her if I could live with her until I got fixed up in a home .
19 It is all up to you — and I decided that I was never going to say anything to her because I had done it all on my own .
20 I knew that she did n't believe in him as I did because in that case I would have recognised her as I had recognised Mother Joseph , who inhabited a territory which I had visited .
21 I kept leaving her as I had mixed feelings about being married to someone older than myself .
22 I 'll ring her when I 've stopped talking to you , she 'll be so relieved .
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