Example sentences of "i [verb] for a [adj] [noun] " in BNC.
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31 | so I managed for a few weeks and then I went to lodge with my sister at Trimley |
32 | Subject : I go for a good win |
33 | Her house was full of bead curtains and reproduction furniture — a fact which impressed me so much I thought for a long time that Reproduction was a period like Jacobean and Elizabethan . |
34 | ‘ However , I went for a second opinion , and I was put on a scan . |
35 | After returning the van to the hire company , I went for a long walk in Hyde Park . |
36 | The next day he and I went for a shorter walk and returned about 6 . |
37 | My mother volunteered to look after the luggage while my father and I went for a short walk . |
38 | Escaping from the awkward embarrassment of arty people , in whose company I can never say the right thing , I went for a Chinese meal . |
39 | To tell the truth I have only hazy memories of the magazine that I took for a long time and until it ceased publication for reasons that were beyond me . |
40 | At one school I attended for a short while , very much for ‘ young ladies ’ , the headmistress descended unexpectedly on a class , with a visitor , and found it in uproar . |
41 | I hesitated for a long time before I began my experiment . |
42 | ‘ I smiled for a brief moment in triumph , ’ he said , ‘ then , as the photographers moved |
43 | After a birching twelve shillings and sixpence for " school medicine " was reputedly put on the school bill — I presume for a new birch , but I never verified this . |
44 | I cried for a long time when I saw that big dark hole in the ground , and we put his body in the grave . |
45 | I went from that to a Gibson EB3 , then to a Rickenbacker 4001 , which I had for a long time . |
46 | I had for a long time being trying to find a way of showing the heat-pain argument to be invalid , because I could not accept the conclusion , that heat exists only as a sensation in the mind . |
47 | I wished for a new dress as I washed and ironed my old yellow home-made mini for the hundredth time . |
48 | I slept for a short time but was woken when the coach stopped . |
49 | So I went back to alight indicator , pulled down only a few inches , which was enough to allow the bream to suck the bait to their lips , and then I paused for a few seconds while I watched the line from the rod-tip tightening in the water . |
50 | If I waited for a hundred years , if I devoted my life to fasting and asceticism and scholarship as the Druids do , still it would make no difference . |
51 | I waited for a full hour before I caught a glimpse of the sight that I had come to see . |
52 | It is not true I married for a red corduroy jacket belonging to my wife 's father ; but there is no denying he did pass it on to me , as a sort of dowry I believe . |
53 | I I quoted for a rolled screw once , yeah and my buying price from I 'm talking about a year and half ago , was higher than 's quoted price for a ground bore screw . |
54 | Then it began to rain hard and I sheltered for a long time in a barn , but I could n't stay there all night so I just walked and got thoroughly soaked . |
55 | one Friday , having done my weekend cleaning and baked a batch of bread during the day , I hoped for a good night 's rest , but I scarcely had retired before my labour began . |
56 | As a development geneticist , I hoped for a personal synthesis of the subject viewed from a different perspective . |
57 | ‘ I feel better about the market now than I have for a long time , ’ he said . |
58 | Captain America 's main man EUGENE KELLY got in touch to tell us the latest development , namely the withdrawing of the sleeve , and added : ‘ I have for a long time been a devoted customer of C&A and will only wear socks and pants with the C&A label . |
59 | I have for a long time had on file one respected artist 's offer to arrange an exhibition of a hundred of his works , and then to hand them straight over as a gift to the Russian Cultural Foundation . |
60 | I have for a long time been suspicious of the doctrine of gradualism in politics and the foibles of the Foreign Office , which uses the double-speak of diplomacy , as I saw in the Anglo-Irish diktat and now smell in Maastricht . |