Example sentences of "[conj] i [verb] [adv] [adv] [to-vb] " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | So it was that I set out laboriously to catalogue the very schema of my own sanity , to list exhaustively the full range of my personal habits . |
2 | It is without any pleasure that I seek once more to call the attention of the House to the problems faced by Derbyshire police force . |
3 | A pleasant change from the heat of Mespot , but with a deal of other diversions that I found easy enough to take . |
4 | Sleep has left me and I feel that I have not long to live . |
5 | So really it sounds the sort of thing that 'll be nice for you and I to go really just to get away from the children . |
6 | Oh , I 've been hearing strange noises up in the loft lately and I got up there to see what it was . |
7 | ‘ And I got close enough to count them as they rode past . |
8 | The proof of the pudding as we all know is in the eating , and I thought where better to sample the pudding than at RAF Uxbridge . |
9 | But on my way through the old garden I had a strange feeling that something was wrong , and I ran back upstairs to check that Miss Havisham was all right . |
10 | When I was about 14 , I remember my sister and I pledging quite seriously to grow up and defy convention ; to be women who still wore jeans and long hair at 30 . |
11 | If I last long enough to get to the air … . |
12 | If I had anywhere else to go I would leave this house . |
13 | Then , fiercely , ‘ But if I had anywhere else to go , I would . ’ |
14 | Well Dorothy got er , some to knit something for Bryony and she actually got too much so if I do run out if I have n't enough to finish this er er vest , T-shirt summer top , whatever it 's called she 'll have some . |
15 | I was only a couple of years older myself , but I knew enough never to believe a word he said . |
16 | ‘ But I 've nowhere else to go . ’ |
17 | I was so unhappy but I had nowhere else to go so I stayed until the baby was born . |
18 | But I had now finally to conclude that the love and the joy and the laughter that was Leslie had vanished for ever . |
19 | ‘ I would be glad to leave it , but I have nowhere else to go . ’ |
20 | Then they put us in the Fleming Hospital in Newcastle , me and the bairn , because I had nowhere else to go . |
21 | Paul starts to move the boats to the top of the falls whilst I run on ahead to talk to the police at the top of the falls with the nice man from the Northern Echo . |
22 | I disremember if it was October or November — it was October , 'cos it was before I came up here to join the matriculation class . ’ |
23 | ‘ I wo n't let it happen — now get your hands off me before I scream loud enough to wake the guards at the Chinese border ! ’ |
24 | When I went round there to take the saw back she was er you know her little tail |
25 | That 's all that Christian offered me when I went up there to lay out that poor young wife of his . |
26 | Yes , she said but er when I went down there to check after you 'd gone , she said erm yours was erm the driest of them sort of thing . |
27 | I just caught a glimpse of you both through one of the windows , but Lewis had already started to come back inside when I went out there to fetch you back . ’ |
28 | As I refused so soon to repeat the horrors of the afternoon , the taxi ride from the Olympik to Nove Mesto ( the New Town ) was a real treat . |
29 | As I earned only enough to pay for my childminder my father paid my train fares . |