Example sentences of "[pron] have [verb] [pers pn] [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 But no-one has dismissed it as a rogue poll .
2 ‘ She looks like someone has punched her in the mouth , ’ said one pal .
3 I 'd kept it in the bottom of my bra-and-pants drawer ever since I stole it from Dad .
4 I knew that I 'd loved you from the moment we first met and I 'd never stopped . ’
5 Yeah , I found , only because I went out one night , and , it was when Mike was still next door and what I 'd done I 'd locked him in the back room and he said he was howling
6 I 'd heard him for a bit by then .
7 I was clumsy and had to pick up a couple of notes from the floor and wipe the bags where I 'd touched them with a handkerchief .
8 I 'd seen them in the shops marked down , as a Christmas offer , to around nine hundred quid .
9 I 'd seen him in the Feathers , surly in his own corner of the Snug , not liked by , not liking , the other villagers .
10 I told him that I 'd seen her in the company of a minder I did n't like the look of and that I 'd followed them to Woolwich .
11 ‘ I told her I 'd seen you over the weekend , ’ she relayed .
12 I 'd seen it along the end of the track .
13 Anyway I went there and I was impressed , I 'd seen it from the ship and I completely concur with everything that 's been said .
14 I suppose the fact that I 'd made it at the age of 14 was important because it meant I would go a long way in athletics .
15 ‘ I 'd have been all right if I 'd made it to the main road . ’
16 ‘ but he was wearing a collar and I 'd tied him to a lamppost . ’
17 I 'd met her at the odd party where we 'd chatted and that 's about it . ’
18 Oh god I thought I 'd lost it for a minute
19 I 'd dragged her into the storeroom and begged her to take me to London , saying my family would n't allow me to go without her .
20 ‘ When I told Martin that I was 10 weeks ' pregnant with my second child , he enjoyed telling people how clever I was because I 'd arranged it between the interims and the final results ! ’
21 I retrieved my stash from where I 'd taped it under the steering column and my cigarettes and green Rizla papers from the dashboard .
22 ‘ Liz lost a winning I 'd given her on a horse .
23 Yvonne Paul whose The Glamour Game ( W H Allen , £2.95 ) tells all about the Glamour Biz sent me in the blouse off her back , drenched in exotic perfume , as a ‘ thank-you ’ after I 'd interviewed her for the Daily Mail and mentioned how much I liked her get-up .
24 Anyway , after I 'd introduced her to a few different locations and got her over the initial newness of the experience , she seemed perfectly willing to come to me .
25 For answer , I picked up the newspaper from where I 'd thrown it on the desk .
26 Perhaps if I 'd entered him for the Champion Hurdle , he might have sold .
27 , so I put her out in the end it erm it was surprising everybody knew what was going to happen they knew what I was going to do right when I come back in after swi place was empty they 'd got out that door before I 'd got her out the door but erm no it 's it 's very insulting .
28 You know , cos I 'd got it at a P P C as well , for national conference .
29 They 've given me a major interrogation — I 'd told you about the Englishman — that 's what I should have been working on , not an idiot fire .
30 If I 'd told you about the entry earlier on it might have lulled you into a false sense of complacency .
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