Example sentences of "[conj] i [verb] [prep] be [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | ‘ Where I come from is chock-a-block with perfectly useful and agreeable people who happen to be old . ’ |
2 | ‘ I could find nothing that I knew to be untrue . |
3 | And I found many details that I knew to be true . |
4 | Not that I mean to be cynical , but I do teach in an inner-city school ( where only Advanced Level pupils have textbooks — and they share — and where practical work involves half-a-dozen to a bunsen ) . |
5 | Here is a signature that I know to be genuine , on a document guaranteeing his overdraft of over twenty years ago , signed in my presence . |
6 | Fortunately it became necessary for me to accompany the well-known Solveig 's Song on a dulcitone , which meant that I had to be close beside her in the wings . |
7 | ‘ Generally that I had to be convinced any person posed a risk — and to give a warning before I fired . ’ |
8 | ‘ The variety of work which included anything from milk quotas to mortgage repossessions , meant that I had to be practical and adapt quickly . |
9 | In 1980 , coming back from a hospital in the States where I had been told that I ought to have an operation ( interestingly on my throat — it was as though all the tension caused by what I could not say was caught up there ) , I saw that I had to be free of this . |
10 | I was experiencing what he meant ; a new self-acceptance , a sense that I had to be this mind and this body , its vices and its virtues , and that I had no other chance or choice . |
11 | Ah but I believed if I 'm going to discuss or argue about anything as regarding that I had to be interested in it . |
12 | When I last wrote to you in January I mentioned that I hoped to be relieved of the secretarial duties of the B.A.E.C. by another member who had volunteered to take these over . |
13 | And we stood there , me with a great big frown on my face , quite mystified that William could n't see what I was getting at … and William smiling but looking equally puzzled that I appeared to be incapable of understanding what he meant . |
14 | It is just that I want to be free . ’ |
15 | I 'm gon na do that I want to be free . |
16 | I have seen at long last that I need to be free of my beloved mistress and even as I write that word it is hollow for how can I love one who no longer has the least regard for me ? |
17 | The definition that I work to is this one . |
18 | I find that I have to be honest with Mary and many others . |
19 | Everything which is now taking place confirms that I have to be careful , very careful , even to the extent of disowning some of my earlier work if necessary . |
20 | Curiously enough , once Don was on , he took over so naturally and hilariously that I forgot to be frightened , had a thoroughly rumbustious time and breezed through the remainder of the show . |
21 | I do n't want him to worry , so I try to be bright and keep going . ’ |
22 | If the race had been over 62 metres then I felt I would have won , but there are no championships at this distance so I had to be content with second place . |
23 | " So I pretended to be ill and went to bed . |
24 | After having amassed around 200 hours on the Corsair since purchasing it in 1982 , the novelty of flying this beast has not diminished : ‘ Today I feel that every flight in the Corsair is as exciting as the first , mainly because with the Corsair you can not afford to be complacent , as the aircraft will sometimes bite back , so I have to be alert all the time while I am flying ’ . |
25 | I have , in part answered the question , ‘ why the body ? ’ and I hope to be able to answer it more fully by using a different approach . |
26 | Nigel assured me that it would be more efficient than the wheel and produce considerably more electricity , and I had to be content with that . |
27 | The ceiling was so low that Frank could never stand up straight and even the shorties like Brian , Terry and I had to be careful not to bang our heads when we were exercising . |
28 | I will not because I am aware of the time and I wish to be fair to other hon. Members . |
29 | and I try to be serious on some and I look miserable . |
30 | And I admit to being guilty of one of Dewey 's charges : as an editor , I have not shared reviewers ' comments with other reviewers , and I have certainly published papers after they have received negative reviews yet may not have explained why to those reviewers who labour so hard on my behalf . |