Example sentences of "[adv] [that] i [vb past] [verb] [pers pn] " in BNC.

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1 He had n't slept in a bed like that before , yet there were all those advertisements for them on television , and they were on display in shop windows and in almost all the big stores in London so that I 'd imagined them in all the houses I could see from the bus .
2 Though the voice was larded with the tones owed to ‘ land in the family ’ , the man himself was decent , polite , unpretentious , and unpatronising throughout the half hour or so that I spent photographing him .
3 So that I wanted to defend him from the beginning .
4 I just … . it 's just that I wanted to tell her how sorry I am about … about what happened to your father and brother but , not knowing her , I did n't want to say it in a way that might upset her .
5 ‘ You will have guessed the first , ’ he resumed , masticating the thick coils of smoke , ‘ namely that I wished to inculcate you a little further in the understanding of my true nature , a little further but not too far — keep 'em guessing is my motto .
6 Now that I had to get it to the by taxi and she had seven stitches put in the leg and , I had to leave her there for six hours , well then it was a taxi back home , I could n't now I am on income support , but that cost me fifty four pound , ninety five and I am paying that .
7 Now that I had got it out I leaned back in my tubular steel chair with just the suggestion of a smirk on my face .
8 Now that I 'd drawn the incident out from my unconscious , in much the same manner as Doctor Keylock or any of the so-called psychotherapists might have done , now that I 'd faced it , admitted it to myself , thought it all through without holding back from any of the horror of what happened that sunny afternoon seven years ago , I could see that , whoever 's fault the accident might have been , it certainly was n't mine .
9 Now that I 'd seen them together like that I started to have fantasies of being invited to watch them together , or to take photographs of them .
10 I always wish now that I 'd met him .
11 I had a similar experience in the vestibule of the BBC with an interviewee from the Festival of Light who was declaiming the sins of magazines with open-crotch poses so loudly that I had to pretend I was n't with him .
12 He said : ‘ I knew then that I had to box it up .
13 Andrew Stavanger was compelled to turn to the bank for help after the dock strikes , and it was then that I got to know him .
14 ‘ It was then that I decided to give it a try .
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