Example sentences of "as [pron] have [adv] " in BNC.
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1 | Though if he took his own life , as everyone has always supposed , and as we are still likely to be supposing after the present rumours have been scotched — if the balance of his mind was disturbed , that curious disruption which accompanies a man 's election to end his life , but never any other procedure , no matter how eccentric or irrational — then reasons are not to be looked for . |
2 | There was an angel watching over me , as someone had once predicted in my childhood when she read my fortune in the tea-leaves , in my cup of white china with the gilt shamrock on the rim and in the centre of the saucer . |
3 | But , as someone had once said to her — she could n't remember who — hate was only a hair 's breadth away from love . |
4 | ‘ As long as someone has n't parked on the patch of paint and taken it all away on their tyres . ’ |
5 | We pay something like one penny per square metre to cut grass and , as someone has already said , to an extent you get what you pay for . |
6 | name ; is a very respectable cook , so we make occasional trips to the supermarket and to the open market , and then eat at home in the evening , although we can also go out to a restaurant for a meal if we want , as someone has now kindly lent us a car . |
7 | I must have made thousands over those university years , much to the annoyance of my own family , as I 'd rarely made the effort for them . |
8 | It was obvious from the moment she came into the house that Dawn , as I 'd immediately christened her ( after all , I 'd had three weeks to dream up the name ) , was a real character . |
9 | And when they hit me with the INSET thing it was the summer term , the first half of the summer term and I was beginning to fray at the edges , as far as I 'd just got things going , and it was just like something else on top of a lot of pressure already . |
10 | ‘ He flew away just as I 'd nearly got him . ’ |
11 | It was about it was the same as I 'd probably got if I 'd have gone to the pit at fourteen . . |
12 | As I 'd already discovered that for myself , I started thinking . |
13 | The two halves of the heart did not ease apart as I 'd fancifully imagined , but clung desperately round one another like drowning lovers . |
14 | Professionally , this is as far as I 'd ever imagined going . |
15 | The living room was as pristine as I 'd ever seen it . |
16 | Dusk deepened until I could no longer see ten yards ahead , and after I 'd knocked the shaft of the arrow against an unseen hazard twice within a minute I stopped and sank slowly down to my knees , resting my forehead and the front of my left shoulder against a young birch trunk , drained as I 'd never been before . |
17 | The floorboards had n't snapped , as I 'd originally thought : they 'd gone down into the dock with Harry . |
18 | All of a sudden , I found myself in a festive gathering , as I had absent-mindedly gatecrashed an exhibition launch at the Gallery of Photography . |
19 | ( I used the royal ‘ we ’ as I had not asked yet ! ) |
20 | A home is a great thing , as I had not courage to say to Mr Robinson , if it is certainly one 's own home , as our little house is . |
21 | I enjoyed Richard who was a casual , almost brutal lover , his desire rising and spending itself as impatiently as mine , so that I did not have to suffer all that tedious , preliminary business of fondling and stroking , and I enjoyed my baby , which surprised me as I had not expected to . |
22 | He put his hands on her shoulders and kissed her , then held both her hands and smiled down at her as I had not seen him smile since I mentioned her name that night in the subway . |
23 | This demonstrated that I was not yet a legionnaire as I had not been awarded my white képi , and as such was still an ‘ engagé volontaire ’ or recruit ; it went on to say that I had one month 's service in the Legion , and that I was part of the Squadron commanded by Capitaine Duransoy , in the section of Sergeant Major Barlerin of the 1st Foreign Cavalry Regiment . |
24 | This surprised me , as I had not thought of him as someone who would favour me , and in any case I presumed that he would support Willie Whitelaw . |
25 | She insisted on having wine with the meal , and as I had n't had a drink in a long time , it made me feel rather tipsy . |
26 | ‘ I should n't think he wants to , ’ Perkin remarked as I had n't answered in a rush . |
27 | Just as I had n't minded when asked if I would like to take care of Jeffrey Bernard for a few days while he was in Sydney to promote the play about himself , Jeffrey Bernard is Unwell , which is currently playing here . |
28 | If they did n't get a move on , I would miss my gig and lose vital cash — as I had n't come in my own car , I was stranded . |
29 | As I had n't been invited to that , I had to conclude that I was there to work , wearing my professional hat . |
30 | We were taken off for a shower — which was welcome as I had n't washed properly since the night before I left London- and then shown our beds in the barrack rooms on the second and third floors . |