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

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1 ‘ Gloria and me went to see him once , ’ said Dot .
2 I remember a tear running down my cheek and me trying to smile it away .
3 ‘ Your Dad and me 's got something to show you . ’
4 My conscience over that headache of an interview you 'd promised Cara — and me making believe I was my sister — was really getting to me . ’
5 I used to bring them home and then , well father and me used to slaughter them on the Monday , you see and perhaps a bullock on the Monday and every Wedn every Monday morning the men from the farm , cos he had a farm , you see , used to bring perhaps twenty bullocks up through the street and he used to pick one out to kill , every Monday .
6 ‘ I might make a little bit more than a social worker and I get to enjoy myself with my clients ’ .
7 I 've got to play some flamenco and bass on a couple of songs and I get to do lots of weird effects and things . ’
8 What we gave you is the time they come and the next weekend they were back again , and I 'd warned them several times and in the end I said look forget it , and I had it , you know , the works gone off , erm , and as far as I 'm concerned it 's Wednesday nights , I 've really got to , and the price I started to pay , is no longer worth it to me .
9 I said to her : ‘ I saw you talking to that fellow , and I 'd warned you . ’
10 He 'd been all set to save England and I 'd stopped him .
11 She approved of my taste and I 'd given her the right amount of money for the red coat which I st ill have n't worn .
12 So er there was this poor girl sitting on this seat and I 'd seen her there and so , there was a nice lady sat they said er they took the Redditch train off the thing and put this Shrewsbury on .
13 ‘ I had known David for quite a long time ; we come from Cambridge and I knew him vaguely in the early days — I remember when he joined the Floyd in fact — and I 'd seen him socially over the years .
14 He were parked up there well every coalman I 've pulled him about this coke stuff and I 'd seen him other day and I pulled him , explained that I were going over on April first
15 I 'd blacked my eyebrows till they were like tarmac , I 'd put raspberry-coloured gloss thick on my lips and I 'd done my eyelids in a limey shade of green .
16 I cam away feeling better because I 'd saved myself quite a bit of money , and I 'd done my bit towards helping the environment .
17 I was doing a training session and I said erm I 'd , I 'd started to say something and I 'd done it , I was talking about something and I had n't done the bit before
18 ‘ I wish it had been boiling and I 'd poured it over your damned head ! ’
19 I would , if I 'd got a fast car and I 'd lost my dreams .
20 I mean if if I 'd done that this morning and I 'd written it all up before you came in and then said well what we 've done is this and then we did that and then we did that but as as it was generated as we discussed then then you were with me I hope at the way it went
21 ‘ but he was wearing a collar and I 'd tied him to a lamppost . ’
22 And I think even while we 'd been in Opposition , remember no one knew whether we were going to win or not , it surprised many people when we did , there had been some sort of discreet across-the-fence interest at the professional Civil Service level in some of the concepts that we were developing and I 'd made it a point of writing the occasional pamphlet as our thinking went along to send out smoke signals to everyone including the civil servants as to what we were about .
23 I 'm going to write a book on , um , the influence of structuralism on feminist literary criticism , and I 'd asked his advice . ’
24 We 'd been in our first house for just over five years , and I 'd served my d-i-y apprenticeship then , improving slightly as each room was restored and decorated .
25 It had come out and I 'd said it 's what I felt at the minute .
26 It was she who told me that Doogie was a commis chef at one of the better Park Lane hotels ( and I 'd said I had n't realized his politics were important and she 'd just looked at me ) and she was a journalist with one of the North London suburban weeklies .
27 ‘ You either sink or swim , ’ she said , ‘ and I 'd decided I was going to swim . ’
28 I 'd gone off of it until we opened that one on Sunday when you came over and I 'd finished it by Tuesday , I was getting quite hooked on it
29 My friend Simon Jones was over from the States and I 'd promised him seats that night , and then forgotten all about it .
30 And I 'd thought they 'd be , suffice .
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