Example sentences of "[pron] [modal v] see [Wh adv] [pers pn] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | I really do n't know I 'll see where she 's put it . |
2 | ‘ I 'll see how it goes . |
3 | I 'll see how it goes anyway , but if you ask him |
4 | I 'll see how I can help you in the meantime . |
5 | ‘ I 'll see how I feel before deciding but it 's a bit of a predicament , ’ he said . |
6 | I 'll see how I feel . ’ |
7 | I 'll see how I feel . |
8 | I 'll see how I feel Carla . |
9 | Well I 'll see how I am tomorrow . |
10 | I do n't know , I 'll see how I feel . |
11 | Hmm , well leave it there and I 'll see how I go , cos I 've had one carrot and I , sort of like , I had your carrot and I 'm putting mine quite rich though that 's the thing , I quite like that bit there cos that 's like brown sugar erm |
12 | He said gon na try and last up to , I said well I 've got ta go so I 'll see how I go but I was shaking I just could n't ! |
13 | Yeah I 'll see how I go any |
14 | It 's not worth me going , I 'll see how I feel , sit there snivelling always . |
15 | I 'll see how I am , I 'll get him some socks , watch him ugh |
16 | No I 'll see how I 'm feeling the thing is I do want to go to enjoy it . |
17 | I was mesmerized by that mouth , by the sharp edges of white teeth I could see when she smiled . |
18 | ‘ Yeah , but you can imagine the problems that Gus would have at that time , and I could see why he would react like that . |
19 | I could see why he was angry : the windscreen of the Shogun was well-smeared with yellow paint and he 'd obviously reacted by turning on the windscreen-wipers , the worst thing he could have done . |
20 | Well yes he might , yes , I could see why he would know , yeah . |
21 | Right yeah erm not much more to add really I sum er summary of needs , I think that 's okay and you explored and probed quite well , the picture was good and all that , I could see where you were coming from . |
22 | It was for this reason that I had Zowie because I could see how he was with children . |
23 | When Paul Sayer won a literary prize for a grimly realistic first novel , The Comforts of Madness ( 1988 ) , in which an insane narrator never speaks , he confessed that it was an imitation of Beckett 's Malone Dies ( 1956 ) : ‘ I could see how he avoided telling about the main thing : that 's something I tried to do in my book , ’ though it does not read like Beckett . |
24 | ‘ I thought I 'd see how you wanted it to be between us . |
25 | Truthfully , of course ; I 'd see how it sounded , and if it were too reprehensible , well , I 'd just have to think up a good lie , that was all , right now at the outset , and stick to it until perhaps I 'd begin to believe it myself . |
26 | The striker is anxious to shake off a thigh strain and said : ‘ I trained today , and I shall see how it reacts . |
27 | Varnish stain but erm In in this particular light now I can see where they 've put on thick blodges that run down . |
28 | It was just that I dislike going off half-cocked , talking too much about a project before I can see where it 's leading . ’ |
29 | I can see where it is . |
30 | ‘ Although now that you mention it , I can see where it would prove useful . |