Example sentences of "i [vb past] [prep] [art] [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 When I became in a conscious way feminist I pondered long what it meant that a woman could not in such a way depict Christ as being in her image .
2 The reason I asked for a preserved pension obviously to see whether there was any preserved benefits .
3 I asked for the usual guarantees — that the object would n't endanger my ship or anyone on it , and that carrying it would breach no SenFed laws .
4 I asked after a long pause .
5 Because I asked in the other classes , three or four American students , and I asked them the same question .
6 With this in mind , I applied for a post-registration course , and eagerly looked forward to benefiting from a new , challenging and mature approach to nurse education .
7 I applied for the occasional post that I thought might be interesting , but never heard anything back .
8 I doubled to the other side of the deck and joined the Sergeant Major and Brigadier Mills Roberts .
9 I doubled across the cobbled yard and stood in the middle of the road to watch the jeeps disappear in the distance in a cloud of dust .
10 Limply I gazed at the mortal oiliness of the water , in which no creature could prosper , and the dockside crowds of welcome floating and swimming above like tropical fish .
11 Raking through the out-of-date but always interesting ‘ History ’ shelves at a local second-hand bookshop several days later , I chanced upon a thirteen-year-old volume , titled Sieges of the Great Civil War , by Brigadier Peter Young and Wilfrid Emberton .
12 I kept wandering around for a few hours , with no idea where I was or where I was going , then somewhere along the line I chanced upon an open space where there was the odd bench scattered here and there and I used one of these for my lie-down .
13 One of the first books I read as a young adult was A G L Fisher 's History of Europe .
14 There is a perception amongst informed people in the community that there may well be a shortage of long stay beds in Leicestershire and you do need to bear in mind that the National Health Service is increasingly going down the road of not keeping people in hospitals longer than they have to because hospitals are perceived as being very , a very expensive way of providing beds and you have to take that into account because that 's a fairly clear national policy and you are likely to see an acceleration in that process from what I read in the national press .
15 Of the other two paintings , one is a picture of a friend , a girl who was also a student , posing in the same life-room , and the other , a portrait I made of a fellow student and good friend of mine from the Royal Academy , James Tower , who became a noted ceramicist .
16 I repeat a proposition that I made to a previous Leader of the House .
17 I reiterate the point that I made to the hon. Member for Greenock and Port Glasgow ( Dr. Godman ) .
18 Be before we start can I make two quick announcements , one er I made at the last lecture , that is there is a public lecture given by Baroness at five fifteen today on the subject of the Soviet Union and wh where does it go , erm and that 's in .
19 Well this highlights my point I made in a previous message … how many of the above transfers out can you say we should have got more ?
20 To those who point to Britain 's right , under the Maastricht Treaty on European Union , to choose not to be part of the Single Currency , I recommend a passing glance at a passage in a speech I made in the closing stages of the second reading of the European Communities ( Amendment ) Bill on 21 May 1992 .
21 The comparison that I made in The Independent newspaper was based on what the Secretary of State 's own review had recommended as the number required to run the system .
22 And was that sublime trip I made around the celestial skyline embracing the deep recesses of Cwm Llan just a dream ?
23 I wanted to become a reporter because I lusted after a belted trenchcoat like the one Joel McCrea wore in Hitchcock 's Foreign Correspondent .
24 I realised for the first time that I have never been wanted : it really was such a revelation .
25 Anyway , I was congratulated once more and I realised for the first time that I was actually doing some good .
26 At that moment I realised for the first time that not a single word had been uttered on the subject since the accident happened .
27 Four years ago , I argued with the then Secretary of State for Health and Social Security about the Fowler review , which led to cuts in income support .
28 In Chapter 2 I argued in a similar vein that the concept of an ontological existent involves the idea of non-arbitrariness , in the sense that by positing something as an ontological existent , i.e. as existing in its own right and not merely as an object of someone 's thought , we are by implication positing this something as a potential subject of a nun-arbitrary subset of predicates from among an indefinite number of meaningful predicates .
29 As I argued in the previous chapter , boxing was the first sport in which institutional arrangements permitted a black presence : almost every weight division produced black boxers of such brilliance that they were virtually without equals ( see Henderson , 1949 , 1970 ; Maher , 1968 ) .
30 I argued in an earlier section of this Chapter that questions of value have always had an uncertain place in institutional literary study , and Catherine Belsey explicitly seeks to banish them .
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