Example sentences of "[pron] [coord] i [verb] a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 It hovered close to me and I felt a coldness on my cheek .
2 He said : ‘ It was very emotional for me and I had a tear in my eye as I came across the line .
3 He said : ‘ It was very emotional for me and I had a tear in my eye as I came across the line .
4 The footman came and dismantled it for me and I brought a chair to the French windows , quite casually , and there was natural light coming in .
5 ‘ On my last legs , ’ Seth wrote later , ‘ I hied down to New Orleans to drink myself quietly to death , and nearly did , but something awoke in me and I wrote a book instead . ’
6 ‘ It worries me and I spend a lot of time thinking about it what we should be doing , what we can do .
7 I used to go and cut their barley to them and I bought a thing for drying the barley too .
8 People do tend , I think rather superficially , to concentrate on figures and relationships between the figures , whereas what really matters is the concept behind them and I think a financier could be somebody who is awfully bad at arithmetic , but does understand the concepts .
9 I remember the day my baby sister was born , but the pirate incident is earlier , for from the time Ann was born , she and I shared a room , and Robert had his own .
10 ‘ How 's about you and me having a sit in my car ? ’
11 Not what you and I call a reason . ’
12 ‘ It 's simply that you and I share a father . ’
13 And also I think it 's high time you and I watched a bit more television . ’
14 I must have knocked it or something and I 'd a couple of shots left and I ought to have shot the swine but I could n't , not while he was sitting there killing himself laughing .
15 so we started to look for something and I wanted a bungalow , I did n't want to house again , just the two bedrooms I thought would be nice , so what we did we found this bu er this bungalow in er out of Crewe in Haslington and er we put up our house for sale , it cost seventeen thousand , five hundred and this bungalow we bought seventeen thousand , six hundred and fifty , so all I had to add was one hundred and sixty pounds , to sell the house , but the house needed change all the windows to put all the windows and the doors because they were all rotting in , you know , because the houses built er before the second world war and er what we did we put up the and in three months ' time , it in three months ' time my house went and we were moved , in September we started to sell , in January we 'd been living in the , in the new bungalow and then about three years later they built a row of bungalows on the other side where there should , should of been , they kept the land , it should of been shops , but then they changed their minds , they did , they did n't build the shops , but they built all these bungalows again on the other side , you 've been to my home , yeah , so the road that , over the road these bungalows were about three years later than ours and they were going down for thirty two thousand pound , and I bought mine for seventeen thousand seven sixty at six fifty , yeah
16 ‘ My first baby changing bag ( Mothercare , £13.50 ) fell apart , so I had to buy another one and I bought a baby changing mat ( £6 ) .
17 And th , I ai n't got one but I got a ticket , yeah ?
18 ‘ David obviously wrote the songs and everything but I felt a lot of responsibility came on to me at that time , although it was nothing like David 's , ’ he says .
19 You know given that life is as it is are you okay and he said yes so I went round the gardens and I came back to him and I had a friend coming for lunch and I thought this is ridiculous , I 'm going to have something to drink and I 'm going to have a meal so I made him an enormous great wad of cheese sandwiches and some apples and a piece of cake and some biscuits and a cup of tea and I went downstairs with the milk and the sugar and cup of tea and all this stuff and I went into the gardens and this poor child he looked very defensively a second time and I said well I thought you might like some breakfast and I wrapped the second lot up so if you 've nothing later on , why not put it in your pocket and eat later in the day and I did n't know whether you took milk or sugar , so I thought I 'd better just ask you and do you know I thought he was going to cry .
20 He has done a lot of thinking and he has concluded the labour party is finished for him and I think a lot more people will do the same .
21 And it 's an opportunity for her and me to say a couple of words to us , and for us certainly to thank her very much for her service .
22 I did n't know the person but I knew of her and I knew a friend of mine went to her , this is the one that did seven years .
23 Still , Will had driven from his Stockport home for the twin purposes of getting some exercise and talking about his book , and neither he nor I fancied a day in sad cafe ambience doing nothing but the latter .
24 Anyway they questionedme and realised I had nothing to do with it and I got a letter saying I was completely innocent and apologising profusely
25 Erm I brought in the old flurry tape , I 've I 've taped I taped our when you 've read my play for me , I erm I taped it and I made a copy for Dave I you know , erm Cybil makes a good effort in that so eventually I 'll lend you the tape .
26 We wo n't go into that because I 've got it and I make a joke .
27 Paragraph , this is quite a major job , as I am sure you will appreciate it and I think a consultant is very likely a must for us , bearing in mind our various units .
28 Does the Secretary of State remember that in Northern Ireland Question Time on 12 December he and I shared a concern about the build-up of munitions and arms as far south as Limerick for trans-shipment to Northern Ireland , as unfortunately happened ?
29 ‘ The Steve Cropper connection came about because he and I got a chance to get reacquainted with one another down in Seville at the Guitar Legends concerts .
30 You see , he and I had a bit of a falling out .
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