Example sentences of "[adj] [to-vb] me [adv] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 ‘ Your mother bought you out and with that money you are willing to buy me out ? ’
2 Peace Corps was willing to send me off to Honduras , but I did n't feel right about it .
3 He had told me what he had to say about the murder and was free to call me again any time .
4 They 're prepared to release me straight away if the Teesside clubs ever merge . ’
5 Dr Agerholme was in charge and she was quite willing to have me there .
6 I can not fight him while he 's my prisoner , I can not kill him until he 's free to face me again in arms .
7 I tried to sell it , but no one was willing to offer me more than five shillings , so Bob uses it for picking up the produce from the market every morning . ’
8 " You mean , he 'd be willing to take me back , afterwards ? "
9 The patrol probably was n't looking for me — there were too many fugitives in Chinatown to concentrate on just one — but they 'd be more than willing to take me in if they tripped over me .
10 I could n't decide whether he was doing this to make me even more relaxed , like a television warm-up man , or because he was over-excited at the prospect of getting at my polyps .
11 I need someone who 's prepared to follow me around , to think along my lines and , in time , to anticipate my needs .
12 Although he seemed to be oblivious of what had happened , because he was concentrating on some letter or other , Eliot looked up resignedly and with a smile of one all too accustomed to the lack of business acumen in other people ; but I could see that he was also relieved to find me not too cast down .
13 ‘ That I can be of help , that she is delighted to have me here and that my presence can be of great comfort to her during these very trying times .
14 He wants very much to take me inside for further ‘ questioning ’ .
15 ‘ I know you 're glad to see me back , ’ said Thorfinn .
16 He 's not supposed to kill me now , the old witch said .
17 " And Jenny 's too ill to pick me up ? "
18 You usually do your darnedest to talk me out of getting involved in this sort of thing . ’
19 was supposed to pick me up from work , okay ?
20 Yeah , but she gets more allowance this week cos she was supposed to give me bloody thirty five quid she owes me .
21 In 1935 a page by David Garnett in the New Statesman first introduced me to her work , and I saw that A House and Its Head was a book likely to give me quite peculiar pleasure .
22 I get on with it most of the afternoon , and I 've still got a stack of unopened buff envelopes in my hand as I head doggedly back up the little twisting staircase and sit down on my hard box seat to get on with it again up here , a task which now looks likely to keep me here after everyone else has gone home .
23 So when my father had to leave in the summer he thought fit to send me here to my lord Isambard , to keep me from under my brother 's feet until Isabel 's safely wed .
24 ‘ And are you supposed to get me out of here ? ’ he asked , sardonically .
25 As you saw fit to remind me before , you do have work to do , the same as I have .
26 What did ‘ the ’ truth matter anyway since there was no one left to tell me more about Elsie except my mother , and her recollection of the events surrounding the disappearance were hazy at best ?
27 At least no person from Porlock was likely to interrupt me today .
28 Tom and Brian saw that I was down and worked very hard to bring me back up .
29 Helen said , after some thought : " I think you 're just saying that to cheer me up .
30 ‘ You 're just saying that to shut me up .
  Next page