Example sentences of "all i could [verb] " in BNC.

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1 I always held that view and did all I could to press for an election before Christmas in order that we might get a majority large enough to stand the racket . "
2 The ‘ magic ’ medium in this endearing space-hopper device is Siporax , claimed to work wonders in nitrate-removal , though my levels stuck resolutely at 30ppm and all I could seen in terms of visual improvement was a better class of blanketweed : sort of lusher , nar mean ?
3 " Great-grandfather , you must know already that I did all I could to stop Kim taking the gibbon , " he said , whispering aloud in the hope that his fervent words might be audible to his father and grandfather standing a few feet away .
4 The district was sinister enough at any time ; now , with the feeling that any and every form of menace , from a cut-throat to a coal-hole , might be within inches for all I could tell , my small remaining resource of courage were exhausted within minutes .
5 ‘ I lay on my nail scissors by mistake — they were under the rug — and just at the moment , well , to be graphic , an awful pain from outside was all I could feel . ’
6 All I could feel were five soft muzzles have a friendly sniff .
7 Her touch became lighter until all I could feel was the heat radiating from her palms .
8 I tried to feel sorry for her , but all I could feel was envy .
9 All I could admit to was boredom , and the belief that school was more fun .
10 I had to or all I could go somewhere else .
11 All I could manage in return was a sickly smile and a feeble , ‘ Thank you , Ma'am . ’
12 ‘ Aunt Kit was drunk , ’ was all I could manage .
13 Later Wendy admitted that ‘ four or five boys in a row was all I could manage ’ .
14 All I could manage was to haunt Rocamar like a beast with no heart . ’
15 ‘ I was so tired by that time that all I could do was sit in a deck-chair on the sea-front and sleep all day , but it was enough . ’
16 ‘ Lemurs are a delicacy in Madagascar and it was all I could do to stop my fellow passengers eating them , ’ he says .
17 He was a tall , heavy-built almost surly type who spoke no English ; all I could do was listen patiently , smile , and offer a small but polite salute on departure .
18 The idea of God pursuing a whole family like a demented genealogist seemed grossly unfair , but as it was a commandment all I could do was hope that neither my father nor any of my immediate ancestors had done anything really sinful , and that if they had , God did n't know of my relationship .
19 There were no books in the room so all I could do was look out of the window and wait for the quarterly chimes from the Cathedral Clock .
20 By next morning some stray cat had eaten much of his back , so all I could do was measure him .
21 So all I could do was to prance about waving flashcards and realia like a second-rate conjuror at a children 's party , and try not to glance at my watch more than once a minute .
22 ‘ I realised he was n't going to be able to stop and all I could do was watch him come closer and closer to me .
23 All I could do was scream down the phone — God knows what the listeners made of it . ’
24 All I could do was dig it out .
25 I wanted to run out and scream , but Mum had the key and all I could do was stand stock still , listening to the thumping of my heart .
26 All I could do was pile up small bits of information hoping it would make an understandable structure one day .
27 ‘ That 's all I could do , without alerting everyone in the neighbourhood .
28 With my father I had more difficulty : all I could do with him was to argue about literature , citing my teachers ' opinions as being more up-to-date and therefore more valid than his own .
29 All I could do was to mumble that I regretted not taking my degree , and , though I could see it was irritating of me to whine , to feel stale and bored was not such a trivial thing ; that though we might have the vote now , meals still had to be prepared and children looked after and since this kind of drudgery was despised by society as not being ‘ real work ’ , we were in the hideous position of being both exhausted and imprisoned by it and also looked down on for doing it ; that I had honestly tried to be the sort of wife Richard wanted — and the sort of wife I felt I ought to be — but it was like being in a kind of airless cell and I could only see Richard as a jailer ; that I saw myself becoming progressively more and more incapable of doing anything , not just mentally , but from some kind of paralysis of will .
30 Is that what she was like ? ’ and all I could do was say well , no , not at all … but that was the licence you got at the NME , because the most important word in the paper is I . ’
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