Example sentences of "[pers pn] was [adv] [adj] [conj] a " in BNC.

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1 My rather innocent trust crumbled when I realized that as far as the police were concerned , I was little better than a criminal on whom they must keep tabs .
2 Even so , I was rather surprised that a family must pay 3.50 for adults and 2.50 for kids to visit and listen to the BBC 's exhibition of favourite old radio programmes at Broadcasting House .
3 I was n't sure whether a distant haziness was dark vegetation or my vision being hazy .
4 I was as happy as a pig in shit .
5 I was as sick as a dog .
6 I was as stiff as a poker , and as red-hot with pain .
7 and I was better qualified than a lot of guys in my class and yet they left college and got a job right away !
8 Whatever her reasoning , I was greatly shocked that a woman of her achievements and reputation should stoop to such shabby fibbing .
9 The annual camp for secondary schools Cadet Corps gave me my first holiday away from home , but I was so homesick that a fortnight seemed an impossibly long time before I could get back to my parents and family .
10 I was more baffled than a pregnant postulant in a eunuch 's prefab .
11 I wanted to join in , but I was only two and a half , and this was the first time I had been left with people I did n't know .
12 Because er as far as I 'd concerned I 'd never heard of air raids before hand you know , know I had n't and I was , as I say , I was only nine and a half I know but er , I did use to speak to a lot more people than most , er lads of that age did like , you know .
13 I was very surprised when a bloke in 1990 was asking £250 ono for the same guitar .
14 I was about sixteen and a half then or going for seventeen aye .
15 That was when I was about fourteen and a half .
16 Even though I was about eight and a half .
17 She was n't more than a few minutes late , but P.C. Clifford kept his word .
18 She was clearly more than a shop assistant .
19 Ellie knew this well , although she was barely five and a half years old , because she and Patsy had talked endlessly about the problem as they sat up in their cot while their father and the ‘ broth ’ played cards below them in the living room .
20 She was visibly astonished when a strange little giggle broke from him , after which he stared at her defiantly .
21 The five minutes were almost up , and she would n't put it past Lori to leave if she was so much as a second late .
22 She was the tallest of the girls , and in some ways she was as strong as a man .
23 And now she was as strong as a cart horse , and he did n't give a damn .
24 She was as strong as a little horse .
25 But , she was as nervous as a kitten because we were , we were in a one of these Canadian type er
26 She was as straight as a die and a pillar of the community .
27 When Aunt Tossie gave , or spent , she was as exuberant as a child , tossing a ball into the air .
28 In fact she was as quiet as a mouse and Ruth hardly knew she was there .
29 As soon as she was in the sack , she was as quiet as a lamb .
30 Wearing Havvie 's ring , a diamond heirloom given to all Blaine brides , laughing , talking and playing with him as the London season began , Sally-Anne persuaded herself that she was as happy as a girl could be , Terry Rourke 's betrayal wiped out and forgotten .
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