Example sentences of "that [pers pn] [vb past] [be] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 I was surprised I 'd been let in at all , surprised that I 'd been able to wander freely about the second and first floors of the cold labyrinthian building of stairwells , escalators and concrete locker-lined corridors .
2 It was going to help me , with what I had in mind , the fact that I 'd been able to wise him up on that .
3 Assuming that I 'd been able to drag the dinghy in a fairly straight line — though I might have gone astray a bit when I was stumbling in the mud — Joanna should be lying more or less straight ahead , and a good deal nearer than when I 'd left , for it was near high water then , and now it was about the last of the ebb .
4 It was so light , compared to the heavy duty G3 , that I 'd been able to forget I was carrying it .
5 She said , with a catch in her voice , ‘ I — I wish very much that I 'd been able to meet him . ’
6 For instance , it 's perfectly obvious that what I was trying to do for my clients was patch up their lives and their relationships in a way that I 'd been unable to do for my parents .
7 When I came back to England I was very humbled really to erm because I arrived in Nepal three hours before that crash and erm a lot of people had thought I 'd died in that crash and erm the patients had thought I 'd died as well and they had to put a big notice outside to say that I 'd been alright , they had lots of people ringing up .
8 Before that I 'd been happy to think of him vaguely in terms of Sartre , de Beauvoir , Paris , existentialism , absurdity …
9 I 'll suggest that I thought is fucking crazy , you know
10 I see a set of conclusions that achieve almost everything that was demanded at that time and I am grateful to everybody concerned who 's actually sat down and actually really thought about what we 're trying to do and everybody has made some compromise here and I shall certainly support this amendment and I shall make the compromise because the one thing in here that I thought was necessary that is n't there is the statement that there will be a head of centre and having actually worked in a project , head of sorry , head of project and having actually worked in a situation where I was a joint manager erm in the long run I think people will see the the wisdom of of a single head of project .
11 ‘ You see , Shelley , there 's so much of me that I thought was dead , coming alive in this place .
12 They are interrupting my fixed gaze into the third ring of the electric fire , or my autistic pacing around the living room , as I try to determine whether the print that I thought was beautiful is in fact so vulgar that it is lying in wait to expose me to ridicule .
13 By coming into a room that I thought was empty — which was n't empty , but had two people in it …
14 When David did things that I thought were stupid , or when he did n't turn up , or he 'd turn up ‘ high ’ , I told him I thought he was stupid .
15 I listened to this tale of woe and as I dug with my tiny spade , wondered what I might find , an arm or perhaps a leg , but the only discoveries that I made were small pieces of coal washed up on the beach .
16 I told her that I had been involved in one of the IRA attacks when I had been blown up in the Brighton Bomb , and that I had friends and colleagues who had been badly hurt or killed .
17 When the tent was up , I had to prove that I had been right about the proximity of a village .
18 I decided this would be a good experimental site on which to try my new detector , and for the first hour of detecting felt that I had been right in my assumption that I had really cleaned this place out .
19 Jan was briskly maternal , having decided that I had been Wronged .
20 I assured him truthfully that I had been impressed by his skill and speed , and I thought his results marvellous .
21 As I came down into Salisbury that day I knew for the first time that I had been happy .
22 It was quite phenomenal and I felt that I had been privileged to run in such a race .
23 I could accept that I had been foolish , but that acceptance was not yet a sufficient antidote for the niggling little pain in my heart .
24 So I said that I had been lucky in a draw for leave , and that now Montague was dead I was to rejoin my original battalion .
25 Loss of my letter of introduction from Barry the Magus had meant that I had been unable to make the most of a brief , lacklustre meeting in Puerto Maldonaldo with its adviser Didier Lacaze , a slight , diffident Frenchman .
26 I would have to go to my constituency and say that I had been outbid by Tory Ministers , and that after complaining for all these years about their accruing power to themselves I had found that I had been wrong all the time .
27 He found it extraordinary that I had been able simply to get into a car in Britain and drive unhindered to Roztoky .
28 It was thus that I had been able to gain some sense of the sort of place Miss Kenton had gone to live her married life .
29 Since those days I have sometimes wished that I had been able to record on tape the conversations I had with Gilbert Harding , who was an intellectual .
30 I knew that I could achieve results despite the difficulties , and I knew that I had been able to demonstrate the ability to work with people of other countries .
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