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

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1 And I remember at the time , I was chasing you over a most ridiculous national press story that Emlyn did n't like the idea of you a pop singer appearing in one of his classics .
2 I was cleaning , cleaning it up and of course I was tapping it with a hammer was n't I to try and get all the putty you know , try and break the putty and most of it came away and I just tapped this one little
3 I was helping him across a busy six-lane road in north London .
4 It would be very strange if I stood here saying do n't use a linear script use thought patterns and yet I was reading everything off a linear script would n't it ?
5 Instead I was getting myself into an increasingly confrontational situation , a battle of wills , with the Director of Coaching .
6 But I was advised to imagine I was telling it to a good friend and not worry about what other people might think .
7 ‘ I 'd hoped for so much from that class since I was taking it at an American university , but — ’
8 ‘ I did n't say I was taking you to a hotel , ’ he replied evenly .
9 He saw the work that I examined and dealt with , and on the Tuesday , I was saluting him as an inspector .
10 I was committing myself to a policy . ’
11 If I was interviewing you as an , as a member of the institution as a , a local spokesman
12 ‘ I suddenly felt that I was doing it to a bunch of people that actually understood what Lear 's pain was about , whereas I do n't standing on the stage at the National Theatre ’ : Brian Cox 's concerns about audience reactions and the nature of the dramatic experience are echoed by others .
13 It just happened that I was doing it in a unique way through the business world of women .
14 He put a solicitor down , and last time I spoke with him I was defending him on a for fraud .
15 Miranda felt a melting and tickling inside her stomach as if someone was stroking it with a feather .
16 She had £8,000 in the Gibraltar fund , a substantial slice of which was providing her with a monthly income .
17 So he resorted to an old favourite , which was to imagine himself as a First World War fighter ace engaged in an aerial duel with an enemy pilot .
18 I had no idea she was using me for a purpose of her own : I was too naive to realise until it dawned on me what it was , a few weeks later .
19 When I turned to close the door behind me she was watching me with a faint smile .
20 anyw anyway erm I was talking to her on the bus not too long ago and , I do n't know how it came up but she was talking about Egypt , and er she 'd been apparently oh some a year or two back cos she did a , an evening course on Egyptology and she went through that , but she was telling me about a friend or friends of hers who 'd been er and told me about the trip .
21 She was treating him like a little boy .
22 The situation arising from this all-too-common attitude was as follows : in the evening she was placing herself in a situation of maximum temptation as far as diet-breaking was concerned with time on her hands and food and drink all too readily available .
23 She never knew how to make it come out sounding as if she was spelling it with a little ‘ m ’ .
24 She had stayed there , always conscious that she was preparing herself for an existence of unutterable boredom , and was one of an enormous number of women who were training themselves for an ‘ if I do n't marry ’ life .
25 One client referred for counselling eventually admitted that she was starving herself as a way of preventing conception ; she did not want another child , but her husband had pressurised her to become pregnant .
26 The lecherous Cohn once used his intercom to address an embarrassed starlet when he asked her if she was keeping herself in a state of sexual readiness for him .
27 ‘ The first time I met Samantha , ’ Bob says , ‘ I 'll never forget this , she was surrounded by these six guys and she was funking herself with a vibrator .
28 She probably imagined she was comporting herself in an attractively provocative and feminine fashion , thought Lydia , sneering and lengthening her stride .
29 A sob , swiftly repressed , rose in her throat ; she was condemning herself to a life as lonely as the seagull 's looked , but it , at least , could find a mate — she would never be able to do that .
30 She was carrying him as a baby along a valley devoid of vegetation and with high hills on each side .
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