Example sentences of "[noun sg] [conj] i [vb base] [prep] [pers pn] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | now if when I come back erm the the er the idea that erm the recommendation that I put before you , if this solves that particular need |
2 | It is with the greatest possible pleasure that I write to you once more , this time to confirm that your Company 's independence has been preserved after a battle which has lasted over nine months . |
3 | I am reserving your request for a copy of the tape until I hear from you , and would appreciate knowing whether you or NEC Central Lab will be going ahead with the order . |
4 | With this tackle , the bream suck the bait right in and have it deep in the mouth when I lift into them . |
5 | The Prime Minister answered a question that I put to him earlier this year by referring to the fact that he did not believe that I live in the real world . |
6 | I get the T T G delivered to my home cos I subscribe for it and I get the business one that you do when |
7 | far back in my life so I can recall my first piece of actual writing , I have a scrapbook at home and I look at it regularly , it had my first pieces of work in it , I usually drew pictures and then wrote things , my first piece was on A four and I have drawn a table , my mum and myself , I was holding a , I wrote one sentence and it was surprisingly literate this is what I wrote , it is my party and I wait for my friends to come , I did many pieces of work |
8 | ‘ We have only one question and I apologise to you , Sir Brian , but it 's a name , that 's all . |
9 | I will use my strength to guarantee you and , in return , you must follow my lead with regard to other powers , and give me support and assistance when I call upon it … |
10 | Unless they 're delegated t to do so within the contract and I rely on you to make sure that whoever is delegated to issue |
11 | That has been our major worry and I think for us now to go away and just allow it to go ahead , twenty years on , without any improvements , without the link road and without improvements to Hill I think is an abdication of our duties and I really do think that . |
12 | Now in the period that I come into it would be the First World War , when we had er , of course in these days , the thing we always , to look at the motor trade then , it was a follow up from the carriage trade . |
13 | " Alas , it 's not physical danger that I fear for him or rather , I fear that too , but since we are all in God 's hands I trust that He will not forsake us no , it 's another danger that I fear for him . |
14 | " Alas , it 's not physical danger that I fear for him or rather , I fear that too , but since we are all in God 's hands I trust that He will not forsake us no , it 's another danger that I fear for him . |
15 | ’ People come in and say to me that when BR is privatised you wo n't have a job and I say to them when BR is privatised you wo n't have a train . |
16 | Members of the jury , it is clear that there is more here than meets the eye and I call on you to reach the only verdict that matches the evidence ; |
17 | That took a lot of courage and I agree with her completely . |
18 | Er , yes I am a person who uses public transport and I believe in it very much , but I must say that erm its very , very inconvenient , I have to rely on three different forms of public transport to get to my work and it takes twice as long as it would as if I , if I could go by car and so I can see the , the attraction of , of going by car and there are many improvements that could be made where I live for instance in , in Glasgow so that you would only have one change and not constantly shuttling to and fro between stations and buses and so forth . |
19 | ‘ I use a very small putter and I crouch over it , ’ he explained . |
20 | I know the muck because I live in it myself . |
21 | ‘ Yet the last thing on my mind is business when I look at you in that witchy little dress ! ’ |
22 | I feel my heart pounding as I think of her , and I can not push from my mind a strong feeling that something has happened to her . |
23 | Dinner parties are my dread but I go to them because my wife , Eileen , enjoys them . |
24 | Now , like all my other gadgets , it is a real friend and I reach for it several times a week to help ease and speed up specific tasks . |
25 | I grab the front of his loose blouson and I heave at it . |
26 | Tonight we 're going to take a look at two aspects of education and I have with me Stephen Ball , who 's been carrying out research into the different between streamed and mixed ability classes in comprehensive schools , and Sandy Grassy , who co-ordinates the many links between the science side of the university and schools . |
27 | I am close to despair as I think of her — –her hollow eyes haunt me whenever I drift towards sleep being slowly sucked dry by that thing in Pampers . |
28 | But I take my immediate clue from the American critic , Norman Holland : ‘ unity is to the text as identity is to a person ; or you could say , identity is the unity I find in a person when I look at him as if he were a text . ’ |
29 | To see this , look at the payoff matrix and imagine the thoughts that might go through my head as I play against you . |
30 | ‘ I just show the prisoners a picture of an aborted baby and I say to them if I had done that to a baby I deserve to be here , but what I am trying to do is prevent it happening . ’ |