Example sentences of "[vb base] [conj] i [verb] [adv] [pron] " in BNC.

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1 I realise that I have little I need to hide .
2 Magwitch and I picked up our bags , and said goodbye to Herbert and Startop , so that we would be ready to stop the ship and get on board .
3 Low and behold when I got back they were waiting for me you see ?
4 ranging from when I went to Leeds to that seminar and there were people excited about the Festival and you know , two weeks before the Festival speaking to Jane in London , said oh we 've had a lot of you know and I said well I 'll get back to you in September and tell you
5 And I thought you know and I think basically it 'd be er sort of assessing the value of buildings for council tax and things like that which is yeah
6 And and the always had maybe sh er sheaves of oats you know but I do n't they were decorated and things like that .
7 Erm I mean if you 're if you feel that I do n't I do n't think you 'd have any problem doing this it 's your it 's your it 's the
8 I feel like I got back my reputation by fighting to prove my innocence .
9 I think and I think well I 've got this one practical to do and I 've got erm
10 Well they probably do but I mean right they can go and I mean what do they spend their money on ?
11 but er , er as I say while I was round there the new town was , was all built and er I found , we found such a difference cos I used to have to go into Old Harlow shopping , I used to cycle before I was handicapped like this , I used to cycle everywhere , and er I went , you used to have to queue up in Old Harlow for the shops , we had n't got anything here at all , no Stow or anything when I first , I mean when I came here nothing , it was just terrible terrible lane up here it was and all these were all ploughed fields and it was really terrible and I had erm , I used to have to cycle into the doctors Old Harlow , queue up , queue up at the butchers , queue up everywhere you had to queue and er , till they built this er the new , The Stow then we used to go to The Stow shopping you know which made such a difference , but er , during my say during my lifetime I 've so , so pleased when the new town came because I wanted to move back to Nazeing where I came from when I first got here because it was such a terrible place there was nothing doing whatever , you know and then I moved erm , as I say after I got round the front there it was more , better really , you know , with all the er traffic and that you could see people going by and that as otherwise it , it was monotonous really in Common Fields , you did n't see much at all there , but you know it was , I quite enjoyed it really , now what else have I got to tell you ?
12 You did actually sort of make when I said well I 've not seen anybody you did say say that but I 'll come to that later on , okay , so it was n't a but you acknowledged and you answered it .
13 My sleeves have cos I thought well what 's that ?
14 And they have happened as I have wanted , and I have taken it for granted that they have because I know where I 'm going .
15 It has a curiously defensive nature , I realize as I walk down it .
16 In short , whereas there is not the possibility of using an argument from analogy to answer factual questions about time on the Sun , there is the possibility when it comes to people 's feelings , and so , being predisposed by the second reason to think that there is some sort of connection between moaning and the pain-language , we naturally fall into the trap of confusing valid fact-establishing arguments from analogy with invalid meaning-establishing ones , and produce the well-known argument that I am , in general , justified in applying ‘ mental ’ language to other people by the fact that they behave as I do when I 'm in a certain state of mind .
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