Example sentences of "i [adv] [verb] [conj] " in BNC.

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1 I 've never met Sir Brian or Sir Oliver and have only met Sir Bernard a few times , but I instinctively feel that all six would lay down their lives without hesitation for a damsel in distress .
2 I little thought that fresh intrusions would interrupt and spoil my solitudes .
3 I rarely speak or am active on guillotine motions and resulting business arrangements on timing , because in general I have long been in favour of timetabling all Bills from the start .
4 I also removed a Building Society book in the name of Francis Maclean , which I reckoned had about £450 in the account , and an Access card in the same name which I rarely used and certainly had nearly a grand 's worth of credit on it .
5 Further points were discussed , for example the need for public liability insurance , which I duly went and arranged ; the need for ‘ Caution : Work in Progress ’ signs at each end , which I duly had made ; the need to take care , when working , not to disturb the kicking stones ; and the need to avoid making heaps when distributing the spoil , so as not to impede the grass cutter .
6 So I duly smeared and squeezed .
7 I was also given an indemnity form , which I duly completed and returned .
8 I naïvely thought that we had something special going for us .
9 When I light-heartedly suggest that he should use Klan members who still harass him for target practice , Cash is genuinely shocked .
10 The audience held its breath … and I secretly prayed that the manager would support me — unlike her counterpart at the Philharmonic Hall who earlier this year asked a young disabled woman to leave the hall because she ‘ offended ’ the visiting conductor .
11 He and Sir John now appeared to be bosom friends and I secretly wondered if the Santerres had suborned this bumbling servant of the crown .
12 But may I politely suggest that in future they beat their meat in the privacy of their own studio instead of soiling our evening with such toss ?
13 I wholeheartedly welcome and endorse the proposals contained in the Gracious Speech , with only one minor caveat .
14 We have an awkward , and increasingly tense discussion about the use of such songs — for though I wholeheartedly agree that all the ideas they promote are self-evidently good things , I worry simply whether such songs have any positive effect — and they start bandying the word ‘ cynic ’ .
15 I would just about have the strength to make it through the gates — to the rest and smoke which I badly needed because my legs were beginning to seize up .
16 I knew in one case that every Saturday morning I would get a letter from a lad who was having a very trying time at an operational training unit , and he begged me week after week , I eventually relented and brought him back ; he nearly went through and completed a second Pathfinder tour .
17 When I obtained the death certificate of Thomas Batty ( 1882 ) , I read that he had lived at Mastington ; I eventually discovered that this was a copyist 's error for Markington .
18 I eventually assumed that , by now , someone else must have written the animal version of Manwatching and recently I went to look for it .
19 When I eventually realized that he was trying to chat me up , I decided to end the conversation and get off the train .
20 It was not that I eventually doubted that the Almighty responded to faith , but that because I had been so bound up by the desert , so full of self-interest , so neglectful of the God I was supposed to serve , that I could not have expected any co-operation from him .
21 I humbly suggest that the two counties should get together .
22 That feeling lasted a while but after we 'd had the children something changed and I slowly realized that I did n't love her anymore .
23 In his letter of acceptance he wrote , ‘ I gladly accept and I shall do all I can for you , ’ and he did literally that .
24 Although I never pointed it out to Ira Dilworth , I rather felt that certain Ogden Nash lines entitled ‘ The Purist ’ might also apply , on occasion , to him .
25 I rather felt if they were n't going to carry in those conditions , we were n't going to get anywhere — the winds are n't going to get any better . ’
26 ‘ Look , I 'm not a feminist as such but I have to admit I rather resent that remark !
27 I rather doubt whether the lesson has been fully learnt by Opposition Members , but the reference to ’ some Opposition politicians ’ is too general ; we ought to make it more particular .
28 I rather doubt if Jack Butler would climb into bed with you to keep warm . ’
29 However , he admits , ‘ I rather doubt if other auditors , similarly placed , would have acted very differently ’ .
30 I rather thought that was it . ’
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