Example sentences of "[adj] [pron] [adv] [vb past] " in BNC.

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1 Two pound odd I just paid for mine .
2 In 1986 I too entered the tomb ; the anthropoid leaden shell was resealed after the 1703 examination and placed in a new rectangular elm shell sans fittings .
3 The last year has taught me how little I really knew about what goes on behind the wrought-iron gates of Buckingham Palace and the red brick walls of Kensington Palace .
4 Cliff Bastin 's verdict on the season 's triumph was unequivocal : ‘ This Arsenal team of 1930–31 was the finest eleven I ever played in .
5 Right , no sorry I just wondered is we want , are we happy with the decision we 've just made , or do we want .
6 Sorry I just ripped all the buttons off me shirt .
7 I 'm sorry I fucking came here worked out dearer this week than they normally do .
8 Sorry I nearly got a ticket as well .
9 Martin took time to reply , ‘ Sorry I never managed .
10 I can see now I was mistaken and I 'm sorry I ever thought it . ’
11 " I 'm sorry I ever got you involved . "
12 But erm I felt as though , I felt exactly the same , I felt I 'd just been asleep I just had my eyes shut and I felt opening one eye to have a look out and see what people were doing .
13 It 's not often that I can say a piece of equipment is inspiring , but reviewing the A2 actually got me coming up with some ideas that I just had to get on tape .
14 One day , something happened that added a new idea to the ideas that I already had .
15 ‘ I think it made it easier knowing that I only had myself to blame .
16 None that I ever heard of returned Mrs Fairfax smiling .
17 He himself says in his 2nd Edition of the Perambulation of Kent , which he revised whilst living here , " At this place of the Bishop in Halling I am drawing on the last scene of my life , where God has given me Liberorum Ouadrigam , all the fruit that I ever had " .
18 I tried to remember what my sister Mary had said about ignoring old wives ' tales and I tried to put them from my mind , but after that I often caught myself glancing at Granny 's picture and it seemed to me that her black eyes came alive and followed me round the room .
19 Er that that I really said it it 's got a history on to an ending with the bit I 've referred to .
20 As a consequence of which well we went to Egypt and the Sudan this business , we came back and er the b the the foreman 's brother he ne he never liked me ever this forema when I were a kid you know , he never liked me at all , I never got on with him and and er mind you there 's a long story about that but it 's a silly little thing that er that I really upset him with .
21 I am perhaps out of line with some of my hon. Friends in that I quite enjoyed the speech made by the Secretary of State for the Environment , who opened the debate for the Government .
22 I never knew that I never knew that .
23 ‘ Remember me confessing to Cal that I never had dreams ?
24 After that I never had any illness .
25 As usual I just wished I 'd ordered the same as her : a bowl of smoked bacon and Roquefort cheese salad with garlic croutons .
26 It was more probable he had returned than that someone else had come .
27 As the last said , it does not have to be , 'cos you felt that someone else had some more energy , 'cos you 're praying for energy performs and you sited some examples .
28 ‘ It was so funny everyone just fell about laughing . ’
29 I was advised that before studying psionic medicine it would be appropriate to learn homoeopathy and this I duly did , leaving my post in the genetics department for one in the homoeopathic hospital .
30 Following this I also heard the first performance of the Serenade with Peter and Dennis Brain at the Wigmore Hall in October 1943 .
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