Example sentences of "i [verb] [vb pp] [adv] [prep] the " in BNC.

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1 Coober Pedy ( form the aboriginal kupa piti meaning " white man 's burrow " ) has a large migrant population but it was an Australian who dug me out when I became bogged down in the dull-dust , and an old swagman on the road who warned me to keep an eye on the weather .
2 ‘ No , they did n't throw me out , miss ; I got fed up with the chatter .
3 If I got fed up with the foster parents there was no one I could turn to really .
4 I was eating my tea that afternoon — they would n't let me go too — and I got called over to the Centre [ the prison officers ' operational centre within the prison ] .
5 So I was close by and so they sent me in so the way I , I got dressed up in the minister 's cassock , and I got in revised the books of Genesis , like through and I get genned up to be a minister and I took in a bible and er well anyway I killed five men and they got out alive .
6 I got dressed quickly in the bitter cold of the room , and washed when I could .
7 I got hauled up before the chief psychiatrist because of the champagne that was flowing . ’
8 ‘ No , I got held Up at the office . ’
9 ‘ I 'm sorry , I got held up at the office . ’
10 I got held up at the last minute . ’
11 I got told off by the ref — I was a bit wild then — and Ian began moaning as though he was crying .
12 ROBBIE When it all happened , when I got thrown out of the school , he said he 'd never wanted to adopt anyway , it was my mother 's idea , not his , it was to make her happy .
13 I got mixed up with the wrong crowd for a while …
14 He was a good playmate and he and I enjoyed playing " horses " where one would " drive " the other in turns with string as harness — and he told me years later it was a bitter disappointment to him when I said I 'd grown out of the game .
15 how much was n't held until after I 'd gone up for the money for Matthew 's back .
16 I 'd gone across to the old folks ' home to have a chat with Maureen and , inevitably , I was telling her about the trouble I was having .
17 If only I 'd gone along with the doctor 's proposals , it would have been over by now — completely and painlessly over , and any feelings of guilt I might have had as a result I would surely have dealt with ages ago .
18 I 'd gone out on the boat
19 I HAVE to admit that up to now , I 'd heard more about The Cranberries than of them .
20 It was n't a nice ten minutes , all the consoling thoughts I 'd scraped together during the night ran away and I was left alone .
21 and I said to Andrea , I says Andrea those two are two of the tills I 'd checked yesterday in the middle of the day and they were spot on I said that money went yesterday evening !
22 I 'd crumpled on to the door mat and I remember a fearful pain , but whether it was my head or my ankle , I do n't really know .
23 I 'd seen Miss Mallender walking out along the pontoon to the boat and I 'd turned away from the window over the sink to 'and Mr Dysart 'is coffee when there was this great whoomph outside .
24 As I looked at her , I thought of her shrinking , like someone in a fairytale , and how one day I might hold her in the palm of my hand with her little voice squeaking commands at me as if she was a mouse I 'd picked up in the garden .
25 He 'd been there first , waiting , and I 'd walked up to the carefully prominent bait and presented him with a perfect target , a broad back in a scarlet sweater , an absolute cinch .
26 I 'd walked up from the village under a brilliantly starry sky , breathing cold shafts of early-morning air , thinking of murder .
27 Because my head landed on his teeth it hurt me more than if I 'd smacked down on the bridge of his nose .
28 Then the afternoon , we 'd had lunch anyway I 'd got up out the chair , I was so bloody livid !
29 Once I 'd got on to the continent I 'd walk there if I had to .
30 I had n't realized just how much I 'd got out of the swing of things but everyone helped as much as they could and I soon adjusted back again .
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