Example sentences of "[pron] [vb base] [prep] [pers pn] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 Afterwards I sit with him in the room at the back , the late afternoon light still coming in through the windows .
2 I build to it during the lost-in-the-wood speech and then it starts a bit uncertainly and then they really get it and it hits the show like a trumpet solo .
3 I don I should also say that following a very recent decision er in our submission that 's probably right , that my Lord as I say , I say to you with no joy , this really is desperate and er one can not have , in our submission , in the minds of the jury by inadmissible evidence , the suggestion that yes we have been harbouring this man two days before .
4 ‘ You are a good officer , Merymose , ’ he said at last , ‘ and although I disagree with you about the capability of our Medjays , I respect your judgment .
5 I suggest to them at the beginning of each session that they will learn about a different existence from any they may already have experienced .
6 I speak to her on the phone almost every day and she 's really important to me . ’
7 and dumb and I speak to him like a goldfish .
8 I look on it as a work of God .
9 I look at it for a moment , tracing out my journey from Westminster .
10 Well maybe it 's because I look at it as a school like that 's
11 I look around me at the massed ranks of Lowestoftians , their vacant faces bearing mute witness to the devastation the town has wrought on their limbic systems .
12 I look upon him as the authentic voice of the Labour party , and I want him to be heard .
13 I look upon it as an act of spite by Durham County Council ‘ You stopped our inner ring road scheme .
14 I did n't even remember her until I read about her in the papers . ’
15 I welcomed moves to cut price increases and did not find that they were being done in secret — I read about them in the newspapers and elsewhere .
16 I read about it at the time , but I heard none of the details .
17 I read about it in a book and it reminded me of her .
18 I read about it in the newspapers , a terrible tragedy , ’ Nevil sympathized .
19 I read about you in the evening paper .
20 When I read about you in the papers , and then heard you 'd been found , I just had to come .
21 I glance past him into the dip .
22 Erm I think that those are erm er disadvantages with which any er possible location in Harrogate er District would start and I do n't think the assessment in Mr 's paper er accurately reflects either the criterion in the structure plan er in terms of assimilation , or indeed the nature of the landscape erm and what I know of it in the Harrogate District .
23 I notice I refer to him in the past tense .
24 The thing I remember about him as an engineer was that we used to get these forms that told you each week who you were going to be working on , what the line-up was , and I saw this thing and it said David Bowie , Studio Two .
25 I lean against him like the bole of a great tree
26 His judgements take on the ex-cathedra ring of a Lawrence : ‘ I believe in you as a painter . ’
27 I appeal to you as an honorary Roman to nip over here in your Popemobile and put a stop to this wanton destruction .
28 What if I decide against it at the last minute ?
29 I talk to them about the choices they 've made which led them to offend , and help them to find strategies to avoid it in the future , ’ she explains .
30 I talk to Gog about rain , I talk to him about the AOL , but he never listens .
  Next page