Example sentences of "[pron] have [verb] [prep] a [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Which poet described a politician as ‘ an arse upon which everyone has sat except a man ’ ?
2 Something no-one has done in a balloon before .
3 We have already heard the hon. Member for Staffordshire , South ( Mr. Cormack ) suggest that there should be a further element which would take into account the length of time that someone has lived in a house .
4 The ring I 'd grasped as a baby
5 I 'd gone for a walk .
6 I 'd played at a club in Soho , even backed a few rock bands Lloyd had claimed to manage , and he 'd run a string of female mud wrestlers , mainly in the clip joint next door .
7 I 'd heard from a sceptic that there were only six basic shots in surfing photography and everything else was just window dressing .
8 ‘ Until the blunders it was one of the best games I 'd seen for a while . ’
9 Well that 's what he said oh no when he went to sleep I did I 'd done about a page this is what I read out , I went Professor Plop and the Time Machine .
10 AS a student , all I 'd done in a hospital was two weeks as a medical student , wandering around .
11 I 'd struggled through a freelance career using a wonderful old black upright Imperial typewriter , the kind hammered manically by Jack ( ‘ Cigarette me ! ’ )
12 I came to motor sport after I 'd qualified as an architect and gained a business degree , ’ he told her curtly .
13 The house was perfect — well , it would have been perfect ; it needed a complete overhaul , of course , redecorating from top to bottom , and then I 'd thought of building some guest-houses , and it seemed a little silly to have a villa with perfect anchorage unless I used it , so I 'd thought of a yacht
14 I 'd thought of a course of Lenten addresses . ’
15 A Canadian reviewer said they looked like people I 'd found at a bus-stop , which I was very flattered by . ’
16 Then , after I 'd walked about a bit and done my errands I suddenly felt much better .
17 My back , my great white back was scored with thirty or forty sharp red welts , regularly patterned , as if I 'd slept on a bed of nails .
18 No , who was that I 'd got ta a statement about then ?
19 She told you I 'd left with a bag .
20 Julie Rose would be there and would return the yellow shoes I 'd left in a dressing room two weeks ago .
21 In the past I 'd behaved in a way that made it impossible for women to stay with me — for instance , I 'd cut off emotionally , or refuse to have sex , or start seeing other women .
22 I lost a sodden pair of boots and socks , and William 's day bag , which I 'd borrowed for a rucksack .
23 The only touch I was remotely pleased with was an elegant , cane-handled parasol I 'd borrowed from a colleague .
24 I fingered Jo 's credit cards , which I 'd slipped into a trouser pocket .
25 What would I have done with a mother who smothered me in love ? ’
26 Afterwards , I had to lie on a bed in a dark room .
27 I had lived in a motor car for a few years and the rediscovery of my legs was painful .
28 Some months earlier he , my step-mother and I had moved into a bungalow at 1122 Henleaze Avenue .
29 If it was like seeing a long lost friend again after twenty-seven years , Darby O'Gill was comfortingly predictable with touches of the old sparkle but we had lost a lot of common ground as I had moved from a place of romance and innocence through a world of cynicism and calculated sophistication .
30 I had to sleep in a tee-shirt , and when all the spots started popping I was in the worst state of my life .
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