Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] [prep] here " in BNC.
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1 | I make myself aware of a three-dimensional object by synthesizing what I perceive from here with what I imagine from there , of a continuing event by synthesizing what I perceive now with what I remember from past and anticipate from future viewpoints ; and in either case ‘ Be aware ’ obliges me to let myself be moved from the different viewpoints , as a causally necessary condition of becoming aware from them . |
2 | Cos I asked in here a few weeks ago and they said . |
3 | I 'm supposed to be resting , but after I 'd had forty winks , I felt a lot better , so I toddled over here . |
4 | I mean in here . |
5 | No I not I sit over here . |
6 | ‘ Well , can I stay in here until the others come back ? ’ |
7 | ‘ Can I stay by here , miss ? |
8 | Well I went to Morrisons we had , I 'd got to do my shopping , so by time I got to here |
9 | And as I got in here I saw that one of the men sitting just where you are was Hal MacQuillan . |
10 | ‘ Right , ’ Ben said solemnly , ‘ but for now can I wait by here for you and walk you back home , it 's no time for a young lady to be out alone . ’ |
11 | Now , when I moved in here twenty five years ago it was a very , very nice block ! |
12 | I have I booked in here an'all . |
13 | ‘ Well , I 've seen all I want to here , I 've got other things to do . ’ |
14 | I had my daughter treated under an assumed name until she was five , to try and prevent the press from finding out things about her , and they have the secret name that I used for here in here . |
15 | I stop by here regular , I never met any British people yet . |
16 | I ache from here to the top . |
17 | When I came over here , I knew what the LH and the Grand Cherokee were , but they had not been introduced and I had n't driven them . |
18 | When I came over here I got to know about Kyrle Hall [ a Birmingham amateur club ] and went along there with my pumps and shorts and that was my introduction to boxing really . |
19 | I came over here when I was two . ’ |
20 | ‘ You do n't think I came over here just to say good morning , do you ? ’ |
21 | This was certainly the case with Mrs S. , the mother of one of my teenage informants , born in rural Jamaica about 1930 , who moved to London about 1960 : I 've never work — I 've never really work when I was back in de West Indies my husband work , I worked when I came over here and I [ took a long time ] to get a job — because I could remember work at de Post Office and I when I pronounce my words you know too [ soft ] dey say dey do n't hunderstand — according to dem dey do n't hunderstand me , my haccent maybe it 's my haccent or what dey don " understan " it or ting an " I feel like I 'm speakin " the same English like over here . |
22 | Ear early before I came over here and they 've got no vacancies none none at Demontfort House at all . |
23 | The front door was still locked and bolted — I 'd only used the back one since I 'd got here — and the keys were out the back , so I came in here to open these french windows . |
24 | ‘ I came in here … |
25 | I know I came in here … |
26 | I know I came in here … ’ |
27 | I 'm sure I came in here ! |
28 | The only reason I came in here was that I was on my way into town when your boys called and they said it would be quicker if I came in to see you . |
29 | ‘ I have n't been feeling too good ; I came in here to … ’ |
30 | ‘ How dare you imply that I … that I came in here with him to … |