Example sentences of "[verb] that i [verb] [vb pp] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 Now you 'll all know that I 've told you the truth ! ’ he shouted .
2 Bainbridge has a lovely village green which was the setting for nothing more remarkable than the fact that I arrived there one day to walk over from Bainbridge to Cam Houses with Tony and Eddie , the landlord from my local pub , only to discover that I 'd left my walking boots back at home in Dentdale and had to do the entire walk in a pair of fur-lined cowboy boots , which earned me the nickname of Roy Rogers for the rest of the week .
3 I 'm gon na ring them up and say that I 've found her !
4 And say that I 've busted my bra strap !
5 ‘ It 's only a bunch of flowers , ’ he said , pleased with her response , ‘ although I can guarantee that I have bought them , and have n't picked them on the way over .
6 It came as a relief at this stage to find that I had got my sums right , and everything met where it ought !
7 When I regained consciousness it was to find that I 'd injured my spine and the doctor had ordered that I was to stay put , otherwise there was the possibility that I 'd end up a cripple .
8 When on Monday before Christmas 1991 I stepped on the scales and found that I 'd done it , I almost died of happiness .
9 I do n't consider that I 've reached my prime .
10 ‘ You forget , ’ Dorothea said gently , ‘ you forget that I have seen him . ’
11 Suzanne worries over it , she would not approve that I have told you .
12 It was becoming dark and I realized that I had lost my way .
13 Yes I re I said that and I realized that I 'd said it and I should n't have done .
14 I th there was , there was one big point that I actually missed out as well that neither of you have picked up on and that was that Maggie actually said that they were having problems with John in school and I should 've come back and , and said well she di she actually said that she was having problems with John , full stop , and I should 've actually come back and , and clarified whether it was at school or not and hence led to the private education and I missed that one completely and realized that I 'd done it afterwards but none of you picked up on that one .
15 In fact , I do n't think that I 've mentioned anything since March , but I am not sure that I did anything really productive during April .
16 I do not think that I have fantasticated them , but time always supplies some element of fancy .
17 When one day I tidied up and cleared out this cupboard , I realised that I had ignored everything in it for over a year .
18 I set off from Beirut for Jerusalem in the late autumn of 1980 ; and the moment I entered Rafi Horowitz 's office in Jerusalem , I realised that I had set myself no easy assignment .
19 I felt a strong feeling of nausea as I realised that I had put my hand through the chest of a dead British soldier that could have been lying in the ditch for several days .
20 It was Jo who first got me to see that I had done my best .
21 I was surprised to see that the recording venue was good old Abbey Road Studios : there is such a prominent background rumble that I had assumed it must have been some city church .
22 It was so carefully written that I 've read it three times and I do n't think it says anything .
23 Well I hope that I 've given you enough to get you started on the right tracks .
24 I just hope that I 've plugged it in properly .
25 I get it , I get it every time I come into one of these but I I hope that I 've got it in got them in formation .
26 And when I 've expanded and I 've told you then I then come back to my ending and I say , okay so what I 've done I 've told you about three aspects of flying , about the safety of it , ab about the costs involved in taking part in flying and about the enjoyment you 're gon na get out of flying and I hope that I 've persuaded you that you will come along on Saturday to take part , and that 's the ending .
27 I hope that I have encouraged you to get the pattern sheets , electronic pen and , if needed , cover-up strips set out on the table ready to draw a pattern .
28 It did not matter that I had rejected my father 's ways , that I had become a marine and was as poor as a church mouse while McIllvanney had become a rich man ; the stench of privilege still clung to me and McIllvanney loved to discomfort me because of it .
29 I would not like it to be said that I had had my mother put away . ’
30 I WAS really only a bystander in the tragedy of young Mr and Mrs McLeod ; it was not really my business , although it could be said that I had known them both — had seen them about — for most of their lives .
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