Example sentences of "[noun] [conj] i [verb] [pos pn] " in BNC.

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1 One evening as I was nearing Farr 's entrance , I was running , tripped , with the result that I banged my head on the pavement .
2 Advanced age had by now somewhat mellowed my mother , with the result that I enjoyed my visits to the palace , for when the subject was other than myself she could be stimulating and amusing company .
3 We were expected to follow the lessons in our Bibles , with the result that I knew my way about the Bible very competently .
4 ‘ Bear in mind that I gave my evidence after Blissett had been charged by the FA for a serious breach of the laws of the game — and the experienced commission of inquiry , which conducted a rigorous investigation into the incident , cleared him .
5 It is as a stranger that I greet my own self , and see it as an unknown fellow traveller through time .
6 It was on one of these weekend trips to Regina that I wrote my first outside interview for the paper — an interview with John Philip Sousa .
7 ‘ Luckily , I 'm a big fan so I knew my stuff and , gradually , Madonna softened . ’
8 On the other hand , it was on this condition that I joined your company : you agreed that should your business ever go public , I would have fifteen per cent of the equity for the nominal sum of fifteen thousand pounds .
9 Then the words rebounded back to my ears and I heard their sound and their meaning , and the pain came back at that moment , too , and it all made sense , the way a policeman 's knock on the door must make sense when you 've committed a crime .
10 I think of Claudia and Victoria and Candice and I compare their facial motions in an impertinent fashion .
11 Tony said no , Jamie finished with Neil and I got my flowers
12 We knocked them out of their rhythm and never allowed them to settle or sustain any momentum and I felt their frustrations were beginning to surface .
13 ‘ I like the physical aspect of British football and I feel my game is suited to the Premier League . ’
14 ‘ Well , for me , I reckon I can run and swim , and make out on the shooting if I put my mind to it , but the riding — well — I do n't know about the riding . ’
15 I nodded , and she closed her eyes and I saw her shoulders slump a little .
16 From its shelter the Corporal and I stuck our snouts up .
17 , I 'm on antibiotics cos I got my .
18 Once we 'd established that nothing had been left behind Emily went off to catch a bus and I decided that no one would mind if I popped my head round the doors of the suite of rooms which George had occupied .
19 However , it was not for me to tell him how to treat his advisers , and half an hour later three civil servants arrived with their notebooks whereupon I dictated my suggestions to them .
20 Well , actually I left school , I think it was the either tenth or eleventh of November nineteen thirty one and I went straight into the Transport Department and I think my record will show that I actually started there on the twelfth of November nineteen thirty one .
21 Oh and I happened to be standing in the back kitchen you know and I got hold of this saucepan and I picked my little brother up and put him under my arm in case he got hurt and I oh I belted my father from his head to his feet with the saucepan .
22 After Ann and I abandoned our assault on Canisp , we visited Traligill , and when another snowstorm swept down the mountain , we scuttled to safety in a convenient cave .
23 We sat round the fire with our leftovers and I answered their questions about the day 's events .
24 I th stick to my former line I think that we 've all had a look at this , er we , I believe it 's a useful , serviceable instrument and I rest my case .
25 ‘ My father , Leslie , was his agent and I remember my father screaming down the phone at Joseph , usually about money !
26 Ya see , I just flew in from the States and I took your British Airways — my all-time favourite airline — and you know what they did ?
27 A bite now is hardly ever missed and I am confident of landing even big fish on this gear if I take my time about it .
28 But so much happened , and it had slipped my mind until I realised your father and my mother must have known each other in the past .
29 The old man turned the key and I saw my chance .
30 ‘ I make my living and I support my mother ! ’
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