Example sentences of "i [verb] to the [adj] [noun sg] " in BNC.

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1 I doubled to the other side of the deck and joined the Sergeant Major and Brigadier Mills Roberts .
2 I reiterate the point that I made to the hon. Member for Greenock and Port Glasgow ( Dr. Godman ) .
3 Well I mean to the untrained eye with a , this guy was suspicious when he saw all this cracked varnish
4 It is presumably that time which is relevant to the comment which I have n't the heart to repeat here where I refers to the current narrator .
5 After a very pleasant lunch therefore , I taxied to the very end of the runway , turned into wind and took off .
6 I only realized what it was when I got to the front door .
7 As soon as I got to the other side of the bank I threw myself down and started to roll . ’
8 And what we used to do to begin with the canal used to dip in the middle , you know there was bike wheels and dead cats and everything in it , and it used to dip and , and there was a sludge and , and the barges used to go up and down with a horse pulling them , and in the middle there was a , so you could n't bottom it in the middle , so when I learnt to swim I used to dive off this ledge and go under the water so far and I , I could reach the bottom when I got to the other side .
9 I can not say that my school days were particularly happy ones and I was not sorry to leave when I got to the official leaving age , which was fourteen in those days .
10 I found the whisky , let myself out of the cellar and locked it , turned all the lights out , gave Mrs McSpadden the bottle , accepted a belated new-year kiss from her , then made my way out through the kitchen and the corridor and the crowded hall where the music sounded loud and people were laughing , and out through the now almost empty entrance hall and down the steps of the castle and down the driveway and down to Gallanach , where I walked along the esplanade — occasionally having to wave or say ‘ Happy New Year ’ to various people I did n't know — until I got to the old railway pier and then the harbour , where I sat on the quayside , legs dangling , drinking my whisky and watching a couple of swans glide on black , still water , to the distant sound of highland jigs coming from the Steam Packet Hotel , and singing and happy-new-year shouts echoing in the streets of the town , and the occasional sniff as my nose watered in sympathy with my eyes .
11 ‘ I would like to make clear the importance I attach to the continued availability of advice , from within and outside the NHS , in contributing to the development of the health service in Scotland , ’ said Lord Fraser .
12 I moved to the leaded window , looked out .
13 I say to the hon. Member for Dagenham what the hon. Member for Orkney and Shetland ( Mr. Wallace ) said about his speech , which is that he made very heavy weather .
14 I say to the hon. Member for Denton and Reddish and my hon. Friend the Minister that I do not see why British Rail , as ever , should be expected to bear the full cost .
15 I say to the hon. Member for Harrow , West that I think that the right hon. Gentleman 's words will have reached the chairman of the Audit Commission .
16 However , I say to the hon. Lady and to the alleged author of that statement that , frankly , I disagree .
17 I say to the hon. Gentleman , who is an Opposition Front Bench spokesman , that he must withdraw that comment .
18 Moderator I reported to the general assembly last year that the Board of Social Responsibility had planned a deficit on its operation of thirty eight eventide homes amounting to a little over two million pounds .
19 I suggest to the hon. Gentleman that our record is the best in the European Community .
20 I apologise to the hon. Member for Banff and Buchan ( Mr. Salmond ) for interrupting his speech .
21 I apologise to the hon. Gentleman .
22 I apologise to the hon. Gentleman .
23 In Chapter 1 I referred to the changing attitude among the leaders of Eurocommunism towards the institutions of Western democracy , and their radical reconsideration of the Leninist model of a revolutionary working-class party , which was elaborated in specific historical circumstances and no longer has any relevance for the politics of socialist parties , particularly in the advanced industrial societies .
24 His two companions , however , sniggered as I referred to the great cardinal , affairs of state , and finally to the Luciferi .
25 In the opening pages of the book I referred to the pragmademic gap that seems to exist between pragmatists who have not had the benefit of a formal systems education , but might wish to make use of soft systems ideas , and those who have developed and applied these ideas at a more academic level .
26 When I put my question to the Secretary of State for Defence , I referred to the hon. Member for Glasgow , Govan ( Mr. Sillars ) .
27 I muttered to the closed door .
28 The rooms could have been empty , it was impossible to tell , and in fact when I came to the special dining car I found a good number of the passengers sitting at the unlaid tables , just chatting .
29 I came to the rapid conclusion that anyone tackling it must be either incredibly brave , extremely stupid — or both !
30 After the first week I came to the reluctant conclusion that Charlie Trumper was n't going to be pleased that I had sacrificed ten pounds of our money — six of his and four of mine — just to appease my female vanity .
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