Example sentences of "[adj] and i [verb] it " in BNC.

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1 she told them that , that 's mine , she told them that I did n't think much of this and I thought it was a rip off
2 I knew this and I knew it was a weakness in him and I should not put up with it .
3 Now yes this is very very welcome indeed , but I do see it Mr Chairman in the experience of the past and that really with the hard work that you both have put in as a piece of paper it is now in the computer as far as I can see and I think there is a term now within agriculture and I will give you an example of this and I think it now , it may apply I think to our road system particular particularly in the north , north Suffolk , yeah I think the term is set-aside , and I hope that some time central government will acknowledge that within this eastern region certainly the Lowestoft area and Waking area we have very great problems , because these pieces of jigsaw do not come into the full picture , they 're put in place now and then and later and in apparent it is giving us a very great problem certainly within the last
4 The methods that she uses erm , and I think this needs to be done well before a disaster , unfortunately so often people only react at times like this and I think it 's such a pity that they do n't do it beforehand , but it 's working on basic assertiveness skills , communications skills like giving a language for feelings , erm building up support for each other , plus the creative work — getting things down
5 He said : ‘ I have been waiting for the last three years for an opportunity like this and I see it as the right time in my career to take it .
6 So I says erm , Do you have any washing machines er that you have and all this and I give it all to him .
7 But your chest is , is sounding clear and I expect it 's management of the hernia that 's going
8 I felt my hand touch something feathery and I pulled it out to see what it was .
9 He sits thinking about everything that could go wrong and I suppose it just eats him up . ’
10 In the words of Alfieri : ‘ Most of the time now we settle for half and I like it better . ’
11 Here Alfieri repeats one of the main issues raised in his introduction , ‘ Most of the time now we settle for half and I like it better . ’
12 ‘ Most of the time now we settle for half and I like it better ’ .
13 You were eight years old and I suppose it is to your mother 's credit that she wanted to spare you any court proceedings .
14 I 've thought about it so much and I feel it must and can be something wonderful for all of us .
15 I do n't know what it is , but it oh it 's carrying me down , I know that much and I have it for years and years .
16 He was deadly serious and I knew it .
17 So you 've got ta keep your four five six and I say it 's your box , seven eight has got to be the
18 yeah defendants list of authority , tab thirty six and I think it 's paragraph twenty eight
19 Well it , it must have been heart trouble the earliest memory I have of that is mother sending me with a neighbour out of Street , a Mrs , to tell my Aunt Lucy which was my dad 's sister , who lived in Street house , house was right opposite their gateway , now Aunt Lucy and there was er her family she w married a fella in and her daughter , her son and me uncle was my dad 's brother , I lived in the house with her , but er I remember tagging this Mrs from the Street down to Street along road and past the hospital , then along Walk and I up in Street , and er tagging Mrs and er Mrs had never met Aunt Lucy and er me Aunt Lucy suffered , what in those days they call it white leg , a woman 's complaint she was bedridden and er when we went in she must have asked why we were there , Mrs was a little bit flabbergasted and I blurted it out oh me dad 's dead , and me Aunt Lucy nearly went into hysterics , so that 's , that 's all I can manage I remember about that .
20 And there 's a time when my father lived at the , and I 'm going up the road this night and I hears this queer kind of grunting , and I could n't understand it of course it was dark and I hears it again .
21 ‘ The path between the car park and the sports centre is quite dark and I imagine it 's the sort of place someone could lie in wait . ’
22 I am wet but utterly unharmed and I enjoyed it . ’
23 I wonder , if I got it right and I remember it correctly , whether that 's still the view ?
24 Tom equalled the championship record of 276 with a 70 and I thought it would be a long time before it would be broken .
25 and I was upset and I thought it was just that but no , it was about two weeks before that I went down with it .
26 I found him half asleep and I thought it was you .
27 ‘ My legs were very weak and I found it difficult to walk , ’ he said .
28 I had a flat tape recorder with a directional mic and I stuck it on the table and above me was a speaker through which all this muzak was coming out .
29 Oh well , I , I , I mean I , my mind , my memory is going I know , but I , but I look at that and I turn it over each month and I have a look at I have an idea what 's
30 He is , after all , the Chairman of that committee but certainly I advised him against that and I thought it was totally wrong er to do it in the way he did and I , I think it was a shame for this Council that he , that he did go ahead , but there you are .
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