Example sentences of "[prep] i [pron] is [art] " in BNC.

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1 For me there is no function left but to return to my father 's house , and care for his old age . ’
2 For me there is an aura of lonely sadness about all the Hebridean islands , but Rona had something else which I found hard to define .
3 I view employment positively , because for me it is a routine which I enjoy and which keeps me going .
4 For Camus the sky was a source of sustenance that he could draw on at will ; for me it is a thwarted promise , yearned for and glimpsed against the odds .
5 I do n't particularly see it as compromise because for me it is a method of going forward , if you can agree on something which is a basic principled demand around a particular issue and then pull into action a broader range of people around that . ’
6 For me it is the saddest part .
7 He told staff : ‘ If people do n't want to go along with me there is no place for them in Ashworth . ’
8 In fact with me it is a passion .
9 With me it is the sound of groups of bars that form a phrase .
10 To me it is a worthwhile occupation and one which I am convinced will stand me in good stead for the rest of my life . ’
11 To me it is a human being in the sea … .
12 To me it is a most hideous brute .
13 Erm to me it is a thriving and very good community , and all it really needs is to look as it 's thriving .
14 But then that question was asked last night erm from one chap about sport versus the arts and I suppose to me it is a quality of life issue erm where do you start an and stop I mean you have a problem when you have a recession do n't you , where you say okay we i we are in a recession we have got limited resources we have to make decisions .
15 Mrs Thomas , of Milbank Terrace in Station Town , near Peterlee , said : ‘ To me it is a load of rubbish .
16 Joe Engelberger may seem ‘ a real fun guy ’ to John Bell , bursting with zest for life , but to me he is a typical example of technocratic ‘ pace-setters ’ , imbued with the virtues of dynamism , expertise and unlimited ambition .
17 To me he is the most beautiful child in the world .
18 To me he is the boss , Shelley , the big man who gives the orders .
19 To me there is no such thing as a holy relic or place .
20 It seems to me there is no other way to get the message over to some of the morons out there .
21 It seems to me there is no foundation for it whatever ; all that a court of justice can look to is the parliamentary roll ; they see that an Act has passed both Houses of Parliament , and that it has received the royal assent , and no court of justice can inquire into the manner in which it was introduced into Parliament , what was done previously to its being introduced , or what passed in Parliament during the various stages of its progress through both Houses of Parliament .
22 And it seems to me there is no reason to suppose that because there are more houses , the propensity to move from one house to another declines .
23 I think it is absolutely plain that there is no possibility , that any local authority wherever Paul were living would find it possible to that he should cease to be a statement in child , it is quite clear , I think , that he is bound to remain a child with a statement of special educational needs , in those circumstances any local authority would have the statutory duty to provide for his education , either at or somewhere else and in practice it seems to me there is no reasonable possibility of his being moved from after he has spent , will it be probably more than four years there perhaps five years there , that I think is not a possibility which has to be catered for .
24 It seems to me there is a tenable argument which says that whether the road the relief road is north or south of Knaresborough , is a strategic matter .
25 And it seems to me there is a grave danger that once established as open countryside and in an area in need of protection , it will be heavens only job to move that in future years .
26 It seems to me there is a massive potential to develop opportunities for practice sharing across Europe and for practice and policy initiatives of the former U K department to be assessed and developed in the European framework .
27 Right , it 's clear i n't it under four rule twenty eight , four , it 's not essential for the disallowance of any cost or interest that er the taxing officer should be satisfied that erm the other party has been prejudiced , in fact that is not a condition precedent to the exercise of his part and disallow interest in this here item , er any prejudice there maybe is merely one factor to be taken into account in other matters and it does seem to me that the fact the court can , can properly and should properly take into account , is , is that erm , it is desirable that to litigation should erm comply with there obligations , either expressly , express or explicit under the rules of the court to comply with matter such as it should have orders part drawn up and served as appropriate , as I say it seems to me that er the plaintiffs 's can be criticized in not erm having perfected the order of Mr Justice er before they did so but er , I have , it seems to me to look at all the relevant pictures in the case , er if it were the case that the plaintiff suffered any prejudice as the result of that claim , clearly that would be a matter which I would have to take into account , but I 'm bound to say it does n't seem to me that the fender of the plaintiffs to perfect the order did in fact cause any prejudice to the plaintiff and indeed if they , the plaintiffs had perfected the order , it seems to me exactly the same course of events as in fact transpired in this case , would actually have occurred and would n't make any difference at all , so unless it 's a matter of simply of er seeking to punish the plaintiff as a matter of discipline , it seems to me there is a , not really anything in the point that the order was not perfected er when it seems to me it should of been , and I , there stood to see the other er circumstances , now it 's quite clear to me having been referred to correspondence , passing between the solicitors that erm although really from a very early stage er the plaintiffs solicitors referring to Mr a letter of early nineteen ninety one indicating that erm the view was being taken that the likelihood was that erm the plaintiffs would have to get their costs out of the defendants share and interest in the premises and er that would be a matter which could only be dealt with when the enquiries director by Mr Justice had been dealt with .
28 To me there is an added dimension if that new country is of a similar type to my own habitat — islands .
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