Example sentences of "which i [vb past] be [adv] " in BNC.

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1 So you know there were erm lots of little things like that erm in the layout of the flats which I thought were n't er well they just were n't practical .
2 And I have lots of letters which I discovered about five years ago , which I thought were probably letters that my father had written it , Adam , because his name and my grandfather 's name were exactly the same .
3 Getting taken to the doctors and getting needles stuck in you erm things like um being fed cod liver oil , things like being hit for doing things which I thought were quite legitimate like pruning my mother 's geraniums and stuff like that .
4 which I thought was rather ironic about Adele , you know , she managed to kind of erm erm quell the the French ,
5 I mean , when I think I was with my bags and things and he went , Jo , the message has gone through , everything 's fine I went , your sister , I relayed that little message which I thought was which I thought was rather comical , you see , and I said , oh did you , and he said yeah .
6 However , having said that , I was impressed with the range of Book Tokens ’ advertising , which I thought was carefully targeted and attractive . ’
7 It so happened that Hugh was the man who had been producing Tony Newley and he said to me after listening to those tracks that this was the most exciting thing to come into his room since Tony Newley which I thought was quite amazing since , some time later , David was quite infatuated with the work of Newley .
8 In fact , it was about the time that David and I both auditioned for Hair and we were both turned down which I thought was quite funny because it seemed that just about everyone else in London got the part , but we were very much the kind of solo singers and perhaps the wrong type .
9 Stuart said he 'd given Oliver some money , which I thought was quite unnecessary , not that I said so .
10 She even got round giving me the wrong answer first , which I thought was quite subtle .
11 Which I thought was quite nice .
12 Which I thought was quite funny .
13 He said about a , a free gift as the first thing and then he said about made enquiries of others which I thought was almost er er a , a way there of saying well , you know , oth other people more or less recommend Friends Provident .
14 And actually , one day , because she knew it was my favourite , she said that I could have permission to have it copied and gave me the name of the jeweller , which I thought was so sweet .
15 She was n't worried about her wardrobe in comparison to me having landed on the on the road , which I thought was extremely good considering that she I 'd just demolished a nice piece of her f er a piece of her furniture .
16 I reached for The Mayor of Casterbridge which I knew was somewhere in the bed .
17 It seemed that there was some , because his face , which I knew was not handsome , with its thin nose and high , bony forehead and small mouth , had still some special quality for me which an unbiased analysis of the features could n't explain .
18 The fact that he had been ‘ much distressed ’ by that prospect proved his genuine regard , which I knew was not contrived .
19 ‘ Did you know she 's a Catholic ? ’ he asked me as though it really mattered , and he gestured with his cigarette at a crucifix that hung over the narrow bed , which I knew was there solely for sentimental purposes because it had belonged to Ellen 's dead father , but to McIllvanney it was a challenge .
20 She crammed it , tissue and all , into the left pocket of her fur coat , which I hoped was either fake or farmed , without looking at it .
21 ‘ In 1980 I was 19 and just coming to the end of The Skids , which I 'd been in since I was 15 .
22 Vic said he thought two camps were a good idea because there would have been two originally and it would psychologically prepare the Indians for playing their ancestors , which I said was just a rationalisation of elitism .
23 At length these bitter fruits of sin , and a sense of dependency on his providence for the averting those dreadful consequences with which others were imminently threatened , brought me to the repentance and gave me a victory over those guilty passions by which I had been so long enslaved .
24 I write in response to Katy Deepwell 's essay , ‘ Time Ladies ’ , ( May/June 1992 ) which I felt was too negative for the situation as I see it : Feminism has been a catalyst for analytical practice .
25 The chapter on Annapurna contains several images which I felt were well below the overall standard .
26 So having gone there I got counselling which I found was very useful to me .
27 The polytechnic handbook which I used was not much help and my tutor has told me to ask the librarian for help .
28 By way of Nero and his brief successor Galba ( who happened to be 73 , which is Mr Healey 's present age ) , we arrived at a picture , on page 483 , of Mr Healey dressed as Father Christmas , which I suggested was deeply melancholy .
29 He was a very nice young man and did bear some small resemblance to me which I supposed was why his mother , perhaps not knowing who his father was , or knowing but having been abandoned by him , had woven this fantasy about a familiar figure from the television screen .
30 There was a drowsiness and calm about the ward , which I guessed was not the case at all times of the day .
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