Example sentences of "[indef pn] [pron] have [verb] " in BNC.
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1 | Lastly , everyone I 've spoken to on the subject would shorten the length of the bass by cutting off the V-shaped cleft in the headstock , which adds nought to the decorative aspect of the bass . |
2 | Of course , everyone I had met today had this wide-eyed look ; the wounded , the jeep drivers , and the Commandos occupying the weapon pits . |
3 | EVERYONE I have spoken to about the New Zealand tour of Wales agrees that , if they are going to be beaten by anyone , it will be by one of the clubs rather than by the national side . |
4 | Everyone I have spoken to about him — without exception — brought up his reading , the breadth of it , the compulsion , and the evangelical enjoyment he took in passing on what he had read the night before . |
5 | There was nothing I had to tell him . |
6 | But nothing I had looked right on me . |
7 | The experience of playing with one , or on one , was astonishing ; nothing I had read had prepared me for it at all . |
8 | ‘ There 's nothing I 've done that I 'm ashamed of , Cleg , ’ she said softly , ‘ my father brought me up to be respectable and that 's what I am . ’ |
9 | But nothing I 've heard today Chairman suggests that is the case . |
10 | Nothing I have seen before can compare to Calcutta . |
11 | Blood gushes forth like nothing I have seen from my own body . |
12 | Romanian opposition leaders criticized his visit as " inopportune " but he maintained : " I feel there is a definite return to democracy in Romania and nothing I have seen or heard here can contradict this feeling . " |
13 | If not then nothing I have written before matters . |
14 | Have you listened to nothing I have said to you since you came here to Malta ? |
15 | Have you listened to nothing I have said all these weeks ? |
16 | Nothing I have experienced illustrates this quite like church planting because of the inherent risk of failure . |
17 | About two months after I had returned home , a letter came from Angela Woodin at Bletchley ; she was someone I had wanted to see but had not had the opportunity : |
18 | Later I had the honour and privilege of meeting Odette Churchill , the heroine of the French Resistance , someone I had admired for years , ever since reading about her exploits when she received her medal after the war . |
19 | I did n't really blame you for not wanting me to come near you , but it was n't a particularly pleasant experience to realise that I 'd put someone I 'd loved through such an appalling time . |
20 | There could 've been something there , someone I 'd met in the past that might open another door . ’ |
21 | Maybe he was just someone I 'd dreamed up . |
22 | Weak form : ‘ Most of all ’ In final position : ‘ Someone I 've heard of ’ |
23 | ‘ Although when I approach a part I link it to someone I 've observed in real life , with drawing this observation is a much closer examination . |
24 | Someone I 've dreamed of and whom I 'm going to work with . |
25 | There 's someone I have to see . |
26 | There 's someone I have to see . |
27 | Somethin' Ah have to dae , that 's all . ’ |
28 | I 'd promised myself not even to think about Julie Burchill again , let alone mention her ( yeah , right on , Camille , we 're rootin' for ya ) , but I must say that I agree with her that the Best of Young British list would have improved by the addition of an American and someone who 'd written a non-fiction book about football . |
29 | She lay under him , loose-limbed , like someone who 'd fallen , and raised both arms above her head to grasp the bedrails . |
30 | ‘ I think so , ’ she said , straightening in her seat and looking around like someone who 'd fallen asleep on a long journey and awoken in an unfamiliar place . |