Example sentences of "'d [verb] another [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 The day after we all met you she assured me she 'd say nothing damaging and said she 'd convinced Merlyn who 'd arranged another meeting on the boat .
2 Many workers said they 'd expected another round of closures despite the earlier announcement of a reprieve for some of the collieries .
3 There he 'd met another woman whom he eventually married and she was then expecting their first child .
4 I think they 'd got another hour .
5 It would have been better if we 'd got another word really .
6 I told them that at one we 'd be going away on another job cos we 'd got another job booked in , but in fact I reorganized everything so that in fact we could do it for them .
7 Just as the record was going to be released , Dave came round and told us he 'd got another manager for us and it turned out to be Ralph Horton who we 'd auditioned for at The Roebuck Pub in Tottenham Court Road .
8 Wish we 'd got another robin , we have n't had one this year .
9 She 'd told another lie .
10 Occasionally someone who 'd died Another type of undertaking was where somebody had died out of the island .
11 Second man in is and he was from Sanco Texas er he only flew a few missions with me , in training I 'd had another co-pilot and er I had checked the co-pilot I had when the crew was organized out , so he could go back through and come as er as a Plane Commander with a crew .
12 After he 'd had another cup of coffee , he went up to see Perdita .
13 He 'd raced another car reaching speeds of up to 80 miles an hour before losing control and ploughing into a roadside bench where the youngsters gathered .
14 Everything had been shattered when he 'd brought another dimension into the situation , tried to force something she did n't want , something she did n't think she could ever face again …
15 ‘ And Dr Kemp — he 'd found another woman , too ? ’ asked Morse , cruelly insistent .
16 Miss Vine 's budgerigar Beano died that night , and so did old Miss Trimm , a favourite teacher once in Dynmouth Primary , whose declining years had tricked her into believing she 'd mothered another son of God .
17 At quarter to eleven her old friend Jerry , the Valium addict , wandered in complaining of stomach pains and said he 'd taken another overdose .
18 He 'd taken another cigarette !
19 If she 'd waited another year she would have garnered twice the price , as the yuppie age was dawning , but unfortunately for herself and her family , Jane had no financial sense whatsoever , except , thanks perhaps to her Scottish ancestry , she always spent as little as possible .
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