Example sentences of "[noun] [conj] [pron] [vb past] me [adj] " in BNC.
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1 | but this time it was a genuine tragedy so he paid me all deposit I put in , he paid me all back , you know , I don I did n't want I do n't want to go caravanning by myself |
2 | Well as I say I went for this interview and she phoned me last Sunday did n't she ? |
3 | It rolled into a hollow and it took me half an hour to get it one yard back onto the road . |
4 | This was in connection with my RNR Sea Cadet duties but it gave me much more confidence on the navigational side of cutter service . |
5 | ‘ I first met Julie when I walked into her gallery but it took me three years to walk out with her as my wife , ’ he says . |
6 | His body was rich with the smell of sweat and kahlua and he sent me sprawling and hyper with untold hormones upon the bathroom tiles , but one day , suddenly , actually it was night , parked atop Mulholland Drive with the car windows steamed and the upright stick shift pressing painfully against my lower back and my head banging against the passenger door , I was paralysed by the heaving horny heaviness of him and my climax was full and first — first time ever — but followed by a limpness in my body , dull as the shade of putrid beige , and later I dreamed he had invaded me in sleep and crushed me with his broadness and with pillows , though Crilly it was not suffocation I feared , no , it was something more abstract , more bodily and carnivorous , something akin to nameless reptiles , and it was not so very different from the gun and the windbreaker blowing large and puffy about a stranger 's gut like a tent in my car at Pico Boulevard , and I so sure I would be found dismembered and crotchless and gory and absurd , strewn from limb to limb across the green tweed upholstery , unrecognisable in death , and again the windows steamed , the windows steamed with that hot clenched nameless fist inside me and the glide of cool metal against my neck , and then there were no thoughts , no words in my head , nothing . |
7 | I implored him not to , but he was adamant , thus following Rear Admiral Poland who had resigned from Muirfield in consequence of my being blackballed there ( ‘ it makes no sense at all ’ , he wrote to the secretary , ‘ that he can be accepted as a guest but blackballed as a member ’ ) : both were sacrifices for which I felt a personal responsibility and which caused me much distress . |
8 | ‘ — and I was placed between Harry Burrows and Piers Langley and they told me all about hunting round here and really it was so interesting that I hardly noticed what we ate , some sort of fish and pheasant I think and , oh yes , there was an ice but by that stage , you know , I did n't have the smallest corner to put in so much as a mouthful — ’ |
9 | He retired after the last C E T and he gave me all his pens and stuff . |
10 | I , he asked me the one , you know , we were on about this morning , the only one we looked at , fifty miles an hour and he asked me that one and I knew it . |
11 | I had no idea that it was Martin until you told me that morning . |
12 | I told him about the defenestration of Ramsey Everett and he gave me five hundred pounds . |
13 | Er , not in the decision , I I spoke to Mr and he asked me certain questions . |
14 | About two years since they gave me that . |
15 | I remember when my husband was alive and we had a Sardinian couple with some unpronounceable name and it took me three months to teach her to make tea properly . |
16 | Cos I nearly died I got on bus other day and they charged me eighty five pence I looked at me clock and it were twenty past nine . |
17 | I was the closet to him , I was within twenty-four hours a day and he called me all the time . |
18 | I noticed Nick Faldo was pulling a trolley and it made me curious . |
19 | I agree , its , its like those their lovely little things , do n't think of buying , it 's not very fair cos I mean , Mar , I mean I 'd be over the moon if someone bought me one of those bags . |
20 | ‘ I spoke to him on Sunday night and he wished me all the best , while I thanked him . |
21 | So we start negative two , minus two , and I know what add means cos you told me last time . |
22 | ‘ Nicely put , ’ I said , and drew on the cigarette until it made me light-headed . |
23 | I went down town yesterday and got some braising steak and it cost me five pounds sixty . |
24 | Maybe it was obvious to most people but he gave me recharged confidence in the project . |
25 | Erm can we can you as part of the discussion , can you start off by saying well thank you very much for the call that you gave me last week but erm erm there 's there 's just a couple of sizes I 'd like to talk talk to you about . |
26 | I was caught in a group near the door and it took me some time to realise that I ought to be looking at the pictures , since that was why we were there . |
27 | But the guilt would not go away : I omitted the incident from the log and it took me two years to own up to it . |
28 | eighty pound if it 's not one thing you know it 's fortnight ago from Co-Op it 's forty one P a packet , went last week it was forty six P a packet , so Richard and Angela went the other day for nan and they got me some at same time , she leant me the money , yeah , cos I was absolutely broke , gone back down again to forty one |
29 | Yeah sir , I just missed out one word and you gave me two . |
30 | So I had to go to the , like the job centre and they offered me this , which I did n't really fancy at the time . |