Example sentences of "[pron] have [verb] [adv] of " in BNC.

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1 Yet every time I thought I 'd broken out of that cage you pushed me back again . ’
2 He was a good playmate and he and I enjoyed playing " horses " where one would " drive " the other in turns with string as harness — and he told me years later it was a bitter disappointment to him when I said I 'd grown out of the game .
3 I 'd have dithered and I 'd have got tired and I 'd gone off of
4 I 'd gone off of it until we opened that one on Sunday when you came over and I 'd finished it by Tuesday , I was getting quite hooked on it
5 By the time I was 22 , I 'd run up nearly £4,000 in debt , and was beginning to fall behind with the payments because I rested sending money off to pay for clothes I 'd fallen out of love with .
6 It was almost as if the independent life I 'd built up of necessity was being disrupted by Grant 's presence .
7 An offer I could n't refuse , Dee-Dee had said ; and I 'd thought only of money .
8 I 'd got out of that because by the time I got home she was gone .
9 I had n't realized just how much I 'd got out of the swing of things but everyone helped as much as they could and I soon adjusted back again .
10 I 'd pulled out of NARCOG after a blazing row with Hurley .
11 I 'd slipped out of bed , leaving Margot the launderess and her sister Phoebe gently snoring ( they sleep on either side to keep me warm ) , and crept downstairs to my secret chamber , behind the high table in the Great Hall .
12 ‘ By when do I have to get out of the house ? ’
13 When I had run out of paper , I bowed to the boys and departed .
14 More camera tips , but I had run out of film and mimed to avoid denting his enthusiasm .
15 Mike Powell was handing over to me and in the general melee of the race he had run out of his box and I had run out of my lane , so we were disqualified twice !
16 I had run out of ideas ; ideas do n't come as easily as all that .
17 But towards the end of my anorexic period I think I was verging upon mental illness in the sense that even those who disbelieve in it might accept , that is , I had become out of touch with reality as perceived by others and unable to cope with demands of everyday life .
18 Erm I had to wriggle out of the scrum
19 I had to wriggle out of the scrum , right , good
20 The name of Carl August of Saxe-Weimar figured largely , but I had heard neither of him nor of it .
21 Only because I got , I had to go out of it
22 But anyway we had this one projector which I had winkled out of this friend of mine , and we stuck it up on a couple of stools and hung some sheets up behind the corner of the room which served as a stage , and with some incense burning in the corner an atmosphere was created .
23 I just started to hate the man , I do n't know what I would have done if I had walked out of the interview room and met him in the corridor . ’
24 Except that in that case Timmy would n't be Timmy , and the thought that there might be no Timmy , that there might be some other person altogether occupying his space in the world , fills me with terror , as if I had looked out of the bedroom window and found the solid earth beneath the house had disappeared .
25 I had expected better of you . ’
26 I had acted out of good faith and in terms of what I thought were the best interests of my client .
27 ( I thought I had got out of this by saying it was a firm 's car park so it would be the same four drivers . )
28 I had a kind of ear infection which caused giddiness and I had to come out of the West End play I was appearing in at the time , The Rose Tattoo .
29 I had dropped out of regular English teaching and set up a special-needs unit in the school .
30 In fact , when he drove us home he was in such a state I had to get out of the van .
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