Example sentences of "[adv] [pers pn] [verb] me [prep] [art] " in BNC.

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1 So they put me in a detention centre for six months .
2 So he left me in a stew of doubt .
3 So he told me in the diner to which we resorted for coffee and blueberry pie .
4 So he took me to a butcher shoppe with a bacon slicer in it and you know it turned out that he was right aftr all .
5 So he started me on the on politics , and he was very good .
6 Tony finds several packets of banana custard that is hot and sweet ; it tastes bloody awful and neither Tony nor I like it , none the less he fights me for the last helping .
7 When I was running away they put me in an approved school for girls run by nuns .
8 Mostly she quizzed me about the burglars and I said they 'd tried to get in through the bathroom window and one of them had put a foot through it , probably coming from the roof next door , and I generally made out that there was a whole gang of footpads up there lying in wait for Santa Claus .
9 ‘ You know , Schatzie , the more I look at you , the more you remind me of a certain Titian .
10 I 'll bet she thinks that directly she lets me into the A.R.R.U. I 'll do a Charlie Peters !
11 Years later she reminded me of a forgotten and to me everyday kind of question .
12 Later he called me to a meeting of the Executive Council and asked me to say what I thought the principles of the Department should be and how they could be implemented .
13 Well you got me for the day today , cos I ca n't go now until I fetch the car .
14 Women make their own minds up about what they want to do , I find , so I left it ; but about a year ago she invited me to a party and indicated that whoever it had been was no longer around .
15 Ah well they put me on the top rate of pay , which was quite good , thirty five shilling a week .
16 Well it does me on a night like that , because the majority of people are either having a damn good lazy swim
17 She had such colour , such brightness , that sometimes she reminded me of the whirling mosaics , except that she was n't fragmented but unusually complete .
18 I see , you criticize my appearance , and then you stab me in the back !
19 But then she scratched me between the ears and I started purring despite myself .
20 Then she took me to the centre by saying that she had asked my husband and had given permission .
21 Then she looked me in the eye and smiled .
22 Sometimes they confuse me with the hon. Member for Walthamstow ( Mr. Summerson ) — I am the hon. Member for Wanstead and Woodford , and unemployment in my constituency has not risen to quite the extent that he suggests .
23 Then they clapped me on the back with too many hands , thrust upon me the plastiform wafer that confirmed payment of the rest of my fee , and proclaimed that they would create a song for the festival in praise of ’ the , most safe and reliable Delmore Curb , master courier ’ .
24 I waited there for what seemed ages , and then they put me in a room on my own and told me to put on a paper gown .
25 Then they put me in a room and asked me questions .
26 Then they took me into a room and told me to take my dress off .
27 Then they took me to a room where I was in solitary confinement .
28 ‘ One dog jumped up and bit off my ear then they pulled me to the ground .
29 He has a few years on me — maybe ten — and sometimes he treats me like the son he never had .
30 Then he tells me about the clothes allowance , and then I know why Sue looks so dishy three times a week , and then I start to salivate because you get to keep them !
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