Example sentences of "i [vb mod] [adv] [verb] to [noun] " in BNC.
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1 | Sometimes he fancied him in the room , and said , ‘ I must just speak to John Bunyan ; he 's over there … |
2 | I must n't go to pieces , she whispered , tomorrow I 'll be brave , and ask Ricky round for a drink . |
3 | ‘ He said he 'd buy me a Pepsi and I said you said I must n't talk to strangers , and I came away . ’ |
4 | So I must n't get to bed too late . |
5 | The fact that it will rain tomorrow , for example , may mean that I should not go to London , even though the balance of reasons on the merits of my going ( i.e. all the reasons pro and con but the rain ) suggest that I should go . |
6 | I might just go to Camden town tomorrow and get it , cos , I mean , it 's seventy , yeah ? |
7 | I might even go to church in the morning . |
8 | Yeah , but I might not go to school tomorrow . |
9 | Wainfleet carried on : ‘ I 've apologized — I 'll even apologize to Linley if it 'll make any difference — but what more can I do ? ’ |
10 | Norma got a huge big chip with chicken dip and then we brought Fred back something to eat as well , we were starving , and I got home last night and I was gon na make myself a sandwich but mummy-in-law was in bed so I says och I 'll just go to bed myself . |
11 | I 'll have a can of beer and then I 'll probably go to bed . |
12 | Cos I 'm in bed right , cos sometimes I go , in the week it depends how I feel like , tonight I 'll probably go to bed about about half-ten or eleven cos I 'm gon na watch Ruby Wax and sometimes |
13 | I 'd like to start somewhere not too much in the public eye , because it takes the pressure off , so I 'll probably go to Argentina or somewhere like that , do some rehearsals and some gigs and see what transpires . ’ |
14 | It 's an absolutely brilliant place I 'll probably get to Cambridge or Oxford or somewhere nice . ’ |
15 | I trembled because I 'll never return to Rome , she thought , because when I leave tomorrow — and I will leave tomorrow — it will be forever . |
16 | ‘ Then I 'll never come to church again ! ’ she cried . |
17 | I 'll never come to terms with it . |
18 | I 'll then fly to Frankfurt myself to oversee the operation . |
19 | I 'm five-foot six and I 'll likely run to fat later on because Ma says I 'm the image of my grandfather , whom I ca n't remember ever having seen . |
20 | And I could n't talk to mum and dad . |
21 | ‘ Funny that , dear , I could n't talk to Lizzie , not to my own daughter . |
22 | I could n't talk to Mama in the same way as I 'm doing now . |
23 | I could n't adapt to conditions in this country . |
24 | ‘ I could n't go to sleep . ’ |
25 | I co I could n't I could n't go to work Monday and Friday , Monday to Friday and then spend all the weekend in the house and then just go to work Monday to Friday again , and do that week in and week out . |
26 | But I could n't get to grips with it . |
27 | I could not explain to Wemmick how I felt about Magwitch 's money , so I said nothing . |
28 | To be quite honest I could just go to bed . |
29 | I have only recently discovered the joy ( and disappointments ) of keeping tropical fish , and I could certainly relate to Ian Moore 's problems with new tank syndrome ( Talkback April issue ) . |
30 | ‘ I could never talk to Jennifer . |