Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] [pn reflx] [prep] be [art] " in BNC.

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1 I felt myself to be a source of pollution , and grew to dread my period , especially as I never knew exactly when it was going to come .
2 For , after all , it was not humility that restrained her from believing herself to be at first sight infinitely interesting , for she believed herself to be the equal even of Clelia Denham : it was simply a deference to the law of probability .
3 And there is a group of policemen , empowered by the State with all the prerogatives of coercion , who imagine themselves to be a beleaguered and oppressed minority victimized by an all-powerful conspiracy between the white liberal establishment and the black community .
4 An exception is fellow guest Jamie Lee Curtis who shows herself to be a fervent Soul II Soul fan .
5 Frederick , a man of limited imagination who thought himself to be the very model of a modern enlightened despot and who had travelled in Poland in his younger years , believed that the Polish nobles and gentry were fools and madmen , deluded Catholic warmongers who lived in a perpetual fog of political weakness and drunken anarchy .
6 Almost at once she was aiming her brightest smile at the nearest Ardakkean , who proved himself to be a male by grinning back at her and swelling his chest manfully .
7 He was amused to observe that she forced herself to be a blank when she picked up the bowl of pus and blood .
8 Colebrooke , much lampooned in the press , was a rather pompous , self-important man who considered himself to be the second most influential politician in England .
9 An educational Bill of Rights would not stand in place of students ' legal entitlements ; students would , as now , still have the right to pursue a legal claim if they felt themselves to be the victim of an in justice .
10 When the shot was first used editorially , illustrating a story on alcoholism , the man wrote a furious letter to Doisneau 's agency , Rapho , in which he revealed himself to be a respected professor at the Sorbonne .
11 On the facts the sole issue was whether he believed himself to be the beneficiary .
12 In his letters to Gundobad , in some of his sermons , and in his versification of the first two books of the Bible , he showed himself to be a reasonable theologian .
13 In fact , if inspected more closely , it shows itself to be a rickety structure of ad hoc contrivance and ill-founded reductivist moves .
14 Left to his own reflections , he reveals himself to be a bright , keen opportunist .
15 On the basis of this identification he feels himself to be a defender of the ‘ national heritage ’ of the nation' .
16 He knew himself to be a good forensic pathologist , reliable , more than competent professionally , almost obsessively thorough and painstaking , a convincing and unflappable witness .
17 He knew himself to be a magical dropout , so it did n't bother him that the mere appearance of a hero at the city gates was enough to cause retorts to explode and demons to materialise all through the Magical Quarter .
18 The Christian community lived in perpetual proximity , even intimacy , with the larger community of which it felt itself to be a part .
19 He felt himself to be a kind of recording angel ; it seemed necessary that someone should see all this who was aware of its sinfulness , of its stench in the nostrils of God .
20 When war broke out in South Africa MacBride was one of the first and most prominent members of the Irish Brigade which fought for the Boer republics , and at Ladysmith , Colenso , and elsewhere he proved himself to be a brave and resourceful soldier .
21 He had only been half listening to the conversation but now he forced himself to be a more accommodating guest .
22 It is clear from his critical writings that , to some extent , he considers himself to be the successor of Kafka and Camus : this influence emerges in his novels , Dans le labyrinthe ( 1959 ) — whose very title evokes Kafka and Borges — and his first work , Un Régicide ( 1949 ; published 1978 ) in which the atmosphere is very tangibly that of the absurd-cum-behaviourist novel ( see Smyth 1983 ) , even if in both cases the metaphysical is subjected to parody .
23 Archery these days is a sport like any other , and he considers himself to be an athlete .
24 " The Lord preserveth the simple , " came the Padre 's voice , quite aptly , it seemed to the Collector for he considered himself to be a simple man .
25 Dunlop refused and for the first time revealed that he considered himself to be the sole owner of the horse .
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