Example sentences of "[adv] my [noun] [conj] [vb base] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 Please pass on my condolences and tell her to call me if she needs any help . ’
2 ‘ Now piss down my back and tell me it 's raining .
3 ‘ I could turn you over my knee and spank you , you make me so angry , ’ he said through his teeth .
4 ‘ Because if you do n't I may be severely tempted to put you over my knee and give you the thrashing you sorely deserve . ’
5 Now I 'll get off my bottom and get it for you . ’
6 I managed to pull off my mask and see it was a white car . ’
7 Well , cut off my legs and call me Shorty , it 's you guvnor . ’
8 When they did n't have a gang to fight they 'd run after me , take off my trousers and hide them in a bush .
9 I 'll forgive you if you find me a taxi that will take me back to pick up my baggage and get me to the airport on time . ’
10 I picked up my knitting and put it away .
11 You know I very carefully picked up my glasses and put them in the case and put it in my in there
12 Now I need you to back up my story and put me in the clear .
13 Periodically I went down into the warmth below , to write up my notes and check them over against the ship 's design plans , which Nils had produced for me before going off with Iain to talk to the Navy Yard people .
14 ‘ Initially I thought I could just pack up my son and bring him here , ’ she says .
15 So after that visit to Bristol , when I went to my little chapel on that bald knoll , I first called up the white healing ball and rolled it around every part of my anatomy , then I called up my archers and let them shine the beams of their torches down onto the spot in my lung .
16 I know I have to pluck up my courage and tell him that when we made love in Sintra he sired a son .
17 Then , when the guests are drumming their knives and forks on the table with impatience , I take out my fillet and slice it into the appropriate chunks .
18 I shall die here and then this creature will tear out my soul and carry it to the Court of the Soul Eaters .
19 They looked very close ; I wanted to reach out my hand and touch them .
20 If they cut out my picture and put it on their wall , maybe they do it because it makes them feel good when they walk into that room .
21 I got sick of this , so I brought an old alarm clock and hung it around my neck and set it to go off at the moment he walked in one day .
22 Miss Abbott , when you came to my house the other day and wandered round my studio and let me see something of your thoughts , it was as if a gale had blown through all the dust and cobwebs , all the mouldering old habits that were growing up round me like ivy , and when you had gone , I tore that canvas off the easel and smashed it — ’
23 Shall I to him make know as yet my change and give him to partake full happiness with me ?
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