Example sentences of "i [adv] [vb past] that it " in BNC.

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1 Now I personally felt that it would be quite inhumane to deal with someone who was somewhere near the magic 60 cut-off , for reasons that it would be impossible to examine with any clarity the reasons for this change of heart , and the strong will that he had shown during his previous operational record .
2 I only meant that it would not be suitable to go on the road with it .
3 Then I suddenly realised that it was a film set .
4 But I just assumed that it was .
5 ‘ Look , I just felt that it was time for a change , that 's all .
6 I just , I just felt that it was the cream the other night , and then I just felt oh , you
7 Erm yeah I th I mean I , I 've got more or less all the points that have been raised but I , I just felt that it went it er it was almost as though you 'd made your mind up before you went in that you were gon na tell him what compressed funds was
8 ‘ Why — because , though at any other time I could perhaps let my feelings have their head , this time , for a reason I simply was n't seeing then , I just knew that it could not be like that with you . ’
9 I always shop on Sunday and I just thought that it was nice to see in the paper today it looks like we will have legalized Sunday trading everywhere for all of us fairly soon .
10 Erm but I just thought that it is appropriate in the circumstances because we have basically provided this facility , that there should be erm
11 I just thought that it seemed to be , you know ?
12 and , I did n't so much I just thought that it happened to me
13 I 'm terribly fond of the book and it was very personal ; I just hoped that it would be personal to other people , particularly people at that same period in their lives .
14 But I just said that it was for the Welsh Office cos I thought if er they knew it was for a Authority you know ?
15 However , I soon discovered that it could help me in many other ways , for example to take all the hard work out of doing my accounts , producing invoices and keeping track of stock .
16 I soon discovered that it 's almost impossible for anyone like myself , with normal sight and hearing , to imagine life without either sense — or to accept that , in many ways , 28-year-old Julia enjoys a nearly normal life .
17 But the outbreak of war on 3 September 1939 made a second Merstham visit impossible , though I always regretted that it could not he managed .
18 I always felt that it was typical of the Quakers ' practical Christianity to allow their building to be so used .
19 I took that view for many good reasons , partly because I always believed that it would play far too much into the hands of the Government .
20 ‘ I think I always knew that it would come out one day .
21 P.C. All right , Sir , but I always thought that it was more creditable to prevent crime and keep one 's beat clean and free from nuisances or offences than to have charges or summonses of a trivial character .
22 I could n't believe because I always thought that it was the guys that sniggered , the guys that were n't interested
23 I distinctly said that it was I who required the tuition .
24 And yet , wrote Harsnet ( typed Goldberg ) , I also knew that it was this cold that drew me , this steady destruction of body and imagination , this utter alienness , as though only that could still excite me , as though anything less alien would only leave me indifferent .
25 I knew that it was quite possible to help Carol remember everything that had happened , but I also knew that it would be quite distressing for her — as indeed the trial itself would be .
26 I also recognized that it was more my fault than his .
27 I there said that it is ‘ every fact which it would be necessary for the plaintiff to prove , if traversed , in order to support his right to the judgment of the court . ’
28 I actually heard that it was going to be used as a food hall .
29 And I actually found that it was , it was better to actually talk to them than just send them
30 Er , the I I also make the point , that er , my understanding is having now talked to a number of the other C A B's , that in fact they were looking to Thamesdown money advice centre because this money was actually to replace funds that previously had been er , available through the Allied Dunbar sponsorship scheme , and which has , which I gather was withdrawn er , at very short notice , and they were looking to Thamesdown to er provide that support and resource as a county resource , and I I therefore felt that it was right to bring it forward .
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