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

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1 Just believe me when I say that I had nothing whatsoever to do with any of this .
2 She said huskily , ‘ Surely you ca n't really think that I had anything to do with this ? ’
3 ‘ I do n't think that I have anything more to say to you , Johnny .
4 Automatically I checked that I had plenty of fuel myself .
5 Later , he would tell Radio One 's Janice Long : ‘ I believed that I had my own work to do .
6 Such a peculiar coincidence startles me into remembering that I have something to write for Esquire .
7 ‘ I keep imagining this morning that I have — please believe me , Milena , because when we 're married you will have to put up with a lot of this , but I keep imagining that I have lots of little crisp sepia legs . ’
8 No mine are n't too bad really it 's just that I do n't like being having said that I had one .
9 He 'd expected it , he added , since he noticed that I had my own plate and cup at work , and bought tea for whoever was sitting with me .
10 But neither can I claim that I had anything to do with it .
11 Your Grace will therefore be so good as to allow me to ask you most humbly for my discharge … seeing that when I asked you for permission to travel to Vienna three years ago you graciously declared that I had nothing to hope for in Salzburg and would do better to seek my fortune elsewhere .
12 It was on the morning when registration began that I had my fatal encounter .
13 Delors , vouchsafes a little more of his vision of a centralised , bureaucratic , and socialist Europe , I confess that I have my doubts .
14 And used to happen twice a year and erm sometimes somebody 'd remember my birthday or find that I had my birthday or and at Christmas time we used to get some money .
15 ‘ Your absence meant that I had her all to myself at breakfast — with the additional pleasure of escorting her personally to school . ’
16 ‘ Just because I knew Mills was suspected of betraying someone does not necessarily mean that I had anything to do with his unfortunate death .
17 Assuming now that I was aware of one or two facts of which you , my dear , could not be , assuming that I had something of importance to communicate to Michel , would you still stick to your stubborn refusal ? ’
18 Because I knew that I had my weaknesses , perhaps that is the reason that I was not more successful .
19 Only the pain was getting rather tedious and Meg insisted that I had it done now before I retired , on the theory I suppose , that better in the Government 's time than my own . "
20 But , it does seem that I have you — ‘
21 ‘ I wish that I had her guts , ’ I thought .
22 At this distance in time , I can not pretend that I had my doubts about its merits : what I did dwell on was a certain psychological subtlety in retailing the author 's love-life , though in terms which today would he considered ludicrously niminy-piminy .
23 ‘ You see that I had you in my mind ! ’
24 One claims that I have his thighs and legs , another that I have his torso .
25 Nettled , I explained that I have what is known as an angular form , and this apparently makes me an entertaining subject .
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