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

  Previous page   Next page
No Sentence
31 He got me so riled I lost a race this afternoon I should have won .
32 I 've always had sweaty feet ever since you married me so do n't start .
33 And he goes to me , he goes to me so have you thought about my , my suggestion of pottery , I went yeah , and I threw it out the window .
34 Other people with less ability have overtaken him on the ladder and it makes me so cross .
35 It makes me so cross when I see so much imported fruit and vegetables in the shops when we have as good , if not better English produce on hand .
36 The LP in question has never made me personally want to kill cops , but it 's made me think about police brutality .
37 ‘ If the FA had asked me personally to select our opponents I 'd have gone for Orient , ’ said Still .
38 Fortunately during the first few months of our marriage Bernard , how shall I put it , practised asceticism — I had no chance of getting pregnant , or very little , and after that he was converted to Marxism , and though we were at it all the time for years , he stood over me daily to make sure I ingested a contraceptive chemical .
39 But death — their deaths have left me less defined
40 I could n't stand me 'ome gettin' tore ter pieces , an' they 're so smelly , ’ she moaned .
41 And I , I must admit , it left me somewhat confused .
42 But if you do n't embrace EDI , relentlessly , every year , conference after conference , you will be faced with the prospect of people like me endlessly expounding the virtues of EDI .
43 Now that I 'm feeling a bit calmer , I can see that it was amazingly presumptuous of me even to imagine that Madeleine might love me enough to sacrifice all the luxuries she 's used to , just to be with me !
44 But there was nothing around that moved me enough to go out and change things .
45 I even tried laying trails of cheese that led to my feet , which she scoffed up , but she did n't trust me enough to take the cheese from my hand .
46 They trusted me enough to allow me into their ranks , but when I saw what they were planning I knew that the only answer was to destroy them , expose them .
47 And that annoyed me enough to drive me to my cabin , to clean myself up and choose fresh clothing .
48 You said then that I 'd never cope , but the farmers liked me enough to ask me to call again . ’
49 I did enjoy our cup of tea together , and thank you for trusting me enough to tell me about your husband 's alcoholism .
50 Do you love me enough to marry me ? ’
51 Yes , eventually I did put it down to your job , worried about Steve being so long away and anxious to tie up the contract , but there was a worse fear — that you just did n't love me enough to want to stay with me . ’
52 ‘ Ca n't you trust me enough to keep it between just the two of us ? ’
53 The heads of the Valuation Department guaranteed me enough work to justify my continued employment , one of my many visits taking me to the Channel Islands during the ‘ phoney war ’ , while the enemy were occupied with Russia .
54 However , I feel sure she values her friendship with me enough to play it our way .
55 That those eyes which have witnessed the Divine Motherhood should henceforward be for ever lowered in contemplation in an enclosed cloister seems to me entirely fitting .
56 I became at once possessive about it … there was already talk about the war ending and Sadler 's Wells reopening and it seemed to me entirely fitting for the Sadler 's Wells Company to reopen the theatre at Rosebery Avenue after the war with a new opera by a leading young English composer .
57 That experience angered and frustrated me sufficiently to consider coming to this place to try to change the evil which the right hon. Member for Finchley ( Mrs. Thatcher ) was letting loose on decent families in decent communities .
58 I was thinking it would be nice to spend some time travelling with someone else , to share the strain but , as we entered the darkness which had me constantly glancing up to check the shadow of my bag , my only companion was the bearded , dark-eyed twin who stared back at me from the occluded window .
59 ‘ I shall not , ’ said Sally-Anne grandly , ‘ reproach you , Dr Neil , for rescuing me merely to ensure that I shall carry on skivvying for you .
60 Me stilla ask me
  Previous page   Next page