Example sentences of "[that] i have [verb] [pos pn] " in BNC.
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1 | Now that I 've seen his photograph and read his prose style , I ca n't imagine how he and Serafin ever contrived to live together . |
2 | ‘ Now I 've been told that I 've lost my place and I 'm very disappointed . ’ |
3 | Or is it that I 've lost my sense of balance ? |
4 | Oh look at that I 've lost me pen now , bloody thing 's , okay |
5 | ‘ It 's true that I 've given my personal backing to Kevin Keegan in our search for players , but we have to be realistic . |
6 | I do n't consider that I 've reached my prime . |
7 | No because everybody who has it is aware of the fact that you know they 've se known that I 've changed my number before and they know why . |
8 | ‘ It might interest you to learn that I 've changed my opinion on that matter , ’ he admitted drily . |
9 | I know my objectivity as a reviewer is going to be put sorely to the test , because so far I 've loved every one that I 've laid my hands on . |
10 | ‘ We were talking about my career , and how I 'm not prepared to have you insinuate that I 've slept my way to the top ! ’ |
11 | For all those who scoffed at the idea of my mastering anything complex like Excel , I 'm pleased to say that I 've bought my first copy , and it 's nothing like as hard as I thought . |
12 | ‘ I think that I 've improved my game a lot , also . |
13 | And say that I 've busted my bra strap ! |
14 | Now that I 've finished my English and do n't have a tutor I 'll be able to get more . |
15 | I point away to you you know that I 've finished my conversation . |
16 | Saying that I 've got me notice on a Monday |
17 | Keep flashing me to say that I 've got my headlights on so I , when I , I give them flash back to say no I have n't . |
18 | After I 'd finished the poem I felt triumphant that I 'd broken my fear-silence . |
19 | Whether it was simply mere enjoyment or relief that I 'd survived my worst imaginings I do n't know — but it felt good . |
20 | When I regained consciousness it was to find that I 'd injured my spine and the doctor had ordered that I was to stay put , otherwise there was the possibility that I 'd end up a cripple . |
21 | ‘ It thought that I 'd sold its mate . |
22 | Bainbridge has a lovely village green which was the setting for nothing more remarkable than the fact that I arrived there one day to walk over from Bainbridge to Cam Houses with Tony and Eddie , the landlord from my local pub , only to discover that I 'd left my walking boots back at home in Dentdale and had to do the entire walk in a pair of fur-lined cowboy boots , which earned me the nickname of Roy Rogers for the rest of the week . |
23 | I 'd been so preoccupied with the physical results of my condition for the last hour that I 'd forgotten its other effects . |
24 | She tried undressing me again and I said no , she 'd better go , that I 'd changed my mind . |
25 | That did the trick — ‘ Of course , ’ recalls the director , ‘ I did n't show him that I had cut my hand in the process . ’ |
26 | If Robert came to you and said in his gentle , somehow caressingly placid voice that I had admitted or confessed to him in ‘ obvious distress ’ that I had pushed my penis up between the hired legs of more than one hundred and fifty tarts ( including three on one single day , or two on one single bed ) then you would probably believe him . |
27 | My exposure to the energy and subtle abilities of my Subud brothers in Java had so ignited my optimism and sense of wonder concerning our hidden natures that I had wangled my way into Lancaster University 's Department of Comparative Religion to write a doctorate on transformational consciousness , in a field which was later to be referred to as psycho-anthropology . |
28 | But it wo n't be that much because I 've been out of things for the last year and before that I had shut my eyes anyway . |
29 | That she had lied to me , that my father had been betrayed by Mills and that I had avenged her husband 's memory . |
30 | It did not matter that I had rejected my father 's ways , that I had become a marine and was as poor as a church mouse while McIllvanney had become a rich man ; the stench of privilege still clung to me and McIllvanney loved to discomfort me because of it . |