Example sentences of "[noun sg] i [adv] [adv] " in BNC.

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1 If they like sentence me straight away for doing something like I 'd think to myself is it worth it ?
2 I will have wages to tide me over initially . ’
3 ‘ Of course I damn well have .
4 ‘ Of course I damn well am !
5 Of course I bloody well did .
6 ( Of course I bloody well did !
7 For my part I very much think so .
8 ‘ If it had n't gone through this time , I would have had no time left in my life to enter the ministry I so dearly want to join .
9 During my time as a gamekeeper I almost always had a supply of fresh meat available to give them .
10 Until now the greeting I most often heard had been G'Tag or Morgen .
11 ‘ He has just told me that if I continue in my present path , remain the fine , upstanding , clean-living boy I so evidently am , I may one day hope — wait for it — to be elected to — Gracious heavens ! — the Cullbridge Athenaeum ! ’
12 The County Council I full well remember some four years ago made a decision that once a site had been in peril , once a decision was made it should n't be brought back into the arena again .
13 Do ray me far so la tee do .
14 Do ray me far so la tee do .
15 do ray me far so
16 It 's a place I really like
17 Dury , the son of a chauffeur , grew up in Upminster and was educated at Chailey Special School , Sussex , and High Wycombe Grammar ( ’ the first place I ever really hated ’ ) .
18 I 've come here to do a job I very much want to do , but I refuse to stay and … ’
19 If I 'm recording on eight-track I very rarely record the drums — I just have them running off the C-Lab system onto a couple of channels , and record voice , guitars and bass on the eight-track . ’
20 It was a period I very much enjoyed , hard work but made easier by my colleagues , mainly Chris Wolley , Bob McSmythurs , Marty Stone and Pat Duff , who shared the lectures with me as well as giving practical assistance in every day .
21 On a dry but extremely windy day I never once felt cold as I sat on top of Red Screes for half an hour munching through my packed lunch .
22 All this other pile of stuff I never even looked at .
23 As his neighbour I see quite a lot of him , as his colleague I hardly ever see him .
24 It 's not that I 'm against autobiographical writing I just generally do n't think it makes good , or true , fiction .
25 George , who was eight years old when Coleridge was born , became almost a second father to him in the difficult years ahead , and was , Coleridge wrote , ‘ every way nearer to Perfection than any man I ever yet knew — indeed , he is worth the whole family in a Lump . ’
26 Coleridge thought George ‘ every way nearer to Perfection than any man I ever yet knew ’
27 He was the first man I ever really looked at .
28 I 'll give you examples perhaps of none , none of these I must admit I , I do n't , I do n't think , they 're not my style I much more my page my training tend to have just two or three points on it rubber stamps on the side flipchart all this sort of stuff big question .
29 Yet straightaway I knew that something had changed , since that distant Moscow meeting and our encounter three years ago in Switzerland : for some reason I no longer felt desire stirring for her .
30 We are concerned primarily about the quality of education and for that reason I very much welcome the tests .
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