Example sentences of "[noun] i 'd " in BNC.

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1 I did go out with one of me mates once and he was going burgling and I needed to do one 'cos I had no money or nothing , strung out , and he went to the Old Hall Estate and broke into a house and I got in through the window with him and I just looked around and saw all these photographs of , y'know like , the family that lived there with the kids and that and I just got this horrible feeling , so I just got out the window and walked away , even though I was strung out and I did n't pick nothing up , I just left him to it ‘ cos , like , though all the burglaries I 'd done , they 'd all been shops .
2 Then the old porter I 'd seen on my first visit shambled across the hallway , teapot with no lid in one hand and a bottle of milk in the other .
3 I changed over to a lure I 'd bought in Hobart , the aptly named Tasmanian Devil , and I began to get the odd flathead on it and not bad fish either .
4 ‘ I was looking for a hiding place for some stupid necklace I 'd bought , and the bureau was the nearest thing to hand ! ’
5 I was getting used to the odd feeling of distance , which made it seem as if it was all about someone else , but it was alarming to see how most of the articles highlighted the love-story angle , rather than the conditions in which John was held or the reasons I 'd given as to why the Government should be doing more .
6 It was a trick I 'd learned never to do without a crash helmet .
7 The proof of the pudding was in the eating , and in my case I 'd got the ingredients wrong .
8 But in any case I 'd chucked all me things in the cemetery , you know , and that 's so when they caught up with me I had n't got any newspapers .
9 I wanted to find out why you were so keen on the espionage angle-just in case I 'd missed something . ’
10 I , I only took one case on after I was married er and that er that was a maternity case I 'd been to the first baby .
11 ‘ In that case I 'd better come with you , ’ Woodruffe said .
12 As he ducks he has Des diving for his legs and me closing in , and this is the moment we all discover the benefits of my upbringing because like a promising cadet I 'd left the pistol 's safety on .
13 That 's a division I 'd never even heard of before .
14 I went down on hands and knees , half in and half out of the doorway , with an excuse ready of looking for a coin I 'd dropped .
15 Heasked me about how the Duke of Edinburgh Award Scheme was going and what level I 'd reached
16 Until we came to the Furka I 'd been impressed by the Spirit R/T , surprised by the agility of its handling , the sensitivity and accuracy of its power-assisted rack-and-pinion steering , the breadth of the uninterrupted acceleration from its powerful turbocharged engine , the lightness of the controls and the quality of the gearchange .
17 I wondered what she was doing , whether she was the eyeful I 'd been told , and whether she 'd appreciate a neighbourly call at two a.m .
18 I , I of course , I suppose going round with milk I 'd perhaps got more confidence th cos I had to take milk whether I wanted to or not , see and we if we got down there and there was two or three of the conductresses down the fleck and er , jump on a Dalston bus cos I 'd got to get to like , you know .
19 I told her to forget this doctor nonsense and talk more reasonably about the oilman and his petrodollars and what he had her do In the dying moments she made a noise I 'd never heard her make before , a rhythmical whimpering of abandonment or entreaty , a lost sound .
20 The sign was in the whole thing , not just the unexpected ferocity of the buck I 'd killed , but also in my furious , almost unthinking response and the fate of the innocent rabbits who took the brunt of my wrath .
21 ‘ I tried to go over the fiction I 'd done , pull out the subtext and put it in a form that you could give to an audience at a world 's fair at the end of the century .
22 Six years ago the only computer I 'd used was some horrid games machine a girlfriend had once become obsessed with .
23 And in that time I became very close to the bunch of desperadoes I 'd first flown out with .
24 The second man fitted the description I 'd heard of her husband .
25 ‘ Of course I 'd had newspapers , but I was n't able to feel inside the atmosphere outside .
26 Of course I 'd seen pictures and I 've always wanted a guitar like that .
27 But of course I 'd had a few drinks , and I had n't worn my glasses anyway , so when the time came to meet her I was n't quite sure what she looked like .
28 And as time went on course I 'd got no experience of house cleaning boots and managing , or anything like that !
29 Anyway , I had an early lunch and I went out , but of course I 'd forgotten
30 The Jessica I 'd known then would have felt more enthusiasm for a Christmas cracker bangle than she was showing for her gold bracelet .
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