Example sentences of "[noun] that i [modal v] [verb] [pos pn] " in BNC.
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1 | I looked at Uncle Hamish , who was making quiet signals that I should clasp my hands and close my eyes . |
2 | ‘ It 's probably just as well for all concerned at the club that I should hang my boots up for a while . |
3 | Shakespeare must have thought them common enough : in As You Like It a frustrated Rosalind says , ‘ I prithee , take thy cork out of thy mouth that I may drink thy tidings . ’ |
4 | Fixing my eyes on them , I could n't help cursing Aisha , wishing she was dead , swearing by the Prophet Muhammad that I would have my revenge because it was she who was stopping me walking those streets and riding in those red buses to find work and a flat or a room of my own . |
5 | The Austrian officials were quite another matter ; middle-aged , self-confident , well dressed and courteous , they enquired how long I intended to stay , glanced in the boot , and waved me on with the hope that I would enjoy my stay . |
6 | I mentioned to Ewen that I still had some ( I told him 10 , but it appears to be only 8 ) copies left of GGE , and yesterday I approached Bargain Books on Princes Street , where I see they 're selling it for £6 , in the hope that I might add my copies to their stock and get a cheque for you . |
7 | I need employment to live , and in the hope that I can save my passage home again . |
8 | ‘ I knew that there was always the danger that I could lose my sight , but I really thought it only happened later in life , ’ says Philippa . |
9 | He was quite determined that I was going to try and escape , and followed so close behind me on the railway stations that I could smell his breath . |
10 | There is nothing in it at the moment that I would want my name associated with . ’ |
11 | Well that 's why now I 'm glad when I 'm come on this diet that I can fill his |
12 | In the end I thought it was a good job that I 'd cut her dead because I began to pick up the gossip about her and found out that she 'd left home when she did because she was pregnant and had had a baby . |
13 | There 's no specific area that I can lay my finger on to explain why West Indian kids underachieve … what is inevitable is that a lot of West Indian children particularly the bright ones will do fairly well up to either the beginning or the middle of the fourth year , and for some peculiar reason their progress will fall off towards the end of the fifth year . |
14 | They were good to me , too , and I recall young John Thwaites being sent down to our farm one Christmas with such a big rosy red apple that I can close my eyes and still see it now . |
15 | ‘ When I spoke of your circumstances , it was only in the belief that I might understand your plight . |
16 | Looking around the sparsely attended Chamber , I had a feeling that I might catch your eye sooner or later . |
17 | If you want to get personal then two can play at that , and I swear on my lifelong friendships with the late Mrs Gandhi , Brian Clough and Michael Parkinson that I will burn my brand new membership card of the NUJ on the square at Headingley if you can name me the full Yorkshire team you 're chairman of . |
18 | To cut a long story short , it was n't until Wednesday that I could fit my shoes for the wedding , which was Thursday ! |
19 | It was not simply terror that I might invade his study and his solitude ; it was terror that I might invade his heart . |
20 | It was not simply terror that I might invade his study and his solitude ; it was terror that I might invade his heart . |
21 | When the man came from I would n't know , but I just felt as a op coopted parish councillor that I should make my voice heard on behalf of all the people that complain to me . |
22 | ‘ I knew , the moment I put the phone down from making that call to England , that not only did I love you with every breath of my being , but there was no way that I could take your being married to anyone but me . ’ |
23 | Exactly , Jesus was saying to this officer that I 'll cure your master when I get there |
24 | In order that I can make my recommendations realistic , how much do you feel you can comfortably invest on a monthly basis to protect your wife and family and make provision for your retirement ? |
25 | I told Lord Dilhorne that I would ask my doctor whether in his opinion I could last the course if the task were laid upon me . |
26 | Apart from the fact that I 'd put my make-up on badly in my haste , I looked fairly normal — a bit flushed , maybe , and my eyes seemed unusually bright , but perhaps they only looked that way to me . |
27 | ‘ I had to come to terms with the fact that I could lose my baby at any time to a foster mother . |