Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] always [verb] [pos pn] [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | It was the summer 1989 when I went down to the golf club with a friend and played around with him after that I borrowed his clubs quite regularly and practised eventually mum & Dad chipped in and I bought myself a set of clubs well to be exact I bought myself a bag of three iron and a putter during the next two years I had saved up and built up my set of clubs until I had a half set of irons and 2 woods during that time I had always left my clubs at the golf club to save me taking the clubs to the course every time I played . |
2 | I had always put my hand on that attenuated strip of iron to push the gate open . |
3 | It has n't always been easy but I 've always kept my self-respect , and I have n't let anybody take that away . |
4 | ‘ My natural mother was my mother 's younger sister , so my mother 's really my aunt , but I 've always called her Mum . |
5 | I 've always fixed my hair the way that people had it before they came to me to have it styled and fixed . |
6 | He says I 've always followed his career , from the 1960 Olympics . |
7 | I also see Spitting Image , yes , though I 've always felt their puppet of me was rather like Richard Nixon . |
8 | I 've always admired her sense of style . |
9 | ‘ Liz , ’ he said , ‘ Liz , I 've always admired your style , but this was something else . ’ |
10 | ’ ‘ I 've always admired your conviction , ’ Harriet says unexpectedly ; but then : ‘ I 'm sorry , he sounds dire . |
11 | John Harris was of great help to me in collecting architectural drawings , and I 've always admired his grasp of that field . |
12 | ‘ Ach , I 've always got my newspaper for when they ca n't reverse . |
13 | I 've always shaved my legs but I 've been told that shaving makes the hair grow more strongly . |
14 | I 've always left my bank book locked away in that drawer . ’ |
15 | I 've always valued your opinion . |
16 | And even when I learned you were a prying journalist — and when I 've always preferred my walks to be solitary — what do I find but that I 'm asking if you would like to walk with me ! ’ |
17 | ‘ Probably the most gifted officer to serve under my command , but I 've always doubted his loyalty to the Party . |
18 | He 's always been surrounded by people who think everything else he does is marvellous , but one of the points of our relationship has been that I 've always criticised his work , and for me those double portraits of the Seventies came perilously close to Photo-Realism . ’ |
19 | P.C. Well , Sir , I have always done my duty . |
20 | I have always done my duty , as my record will show . |
21 | I have always wanted my policies to last . |
22 | I have always liked your house . ’ |
23 | ‘ I have always expressed my solidarity with my colleagues , ’ he said . |
24 | ‘ I have always expressed my solidarity with my colleagues even when after discussion in the commission my point of view has not been retained , ’ he explained . |
25 | Although we have sometimes disagreed on scientific matters , I have always remained your friend . |
26 | He said : ‘ I read the tips Stephen Shakeshaft put in the Echo because I have always admired his work . |
27 | Hazel said she intended to spend her vouchers on items for her home and said : ‘ I am very pleased to reach this milestone because I have always enjoyed my work and have made a lot of good friends over the years . ’ |
28 | He moves into a long attempt , which takes up the rest of the book , to revise the earlier ontology of Being and Nothingness into a new ontology of action and even of History , as if , after all , he is investigating the prospect of accrediting the latter with ontological status — a possibility which has always haunted his text in its insistent negation . |
29 | The only thing that ‘ rang bells ’ for him was his own consciousness — Djwa 's ‘ experience ’ — and most of all the inner experiences which had always dominated his vision — his ‘ inner landscape ’ . |
30 | Zelma , bless her , who has always regarded her son-in-law as a sort of concierge who somehow manages to throw up the odd masterpiece in between sitting at a desk , gazing uselessly out of the window and making endless messes in her kitchen with his coffee dregs and fag ash , had been popping into the study at fairly regular intervals , with unspecific enquiries . |