Example sentences of "[pers pn] [vb past] little [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Apart from the accumulation of translated index cards , Edward and I made little progress , but our humour was good .
2 I got little pyjamas for him three ninety nine at .
3 The game was all ticket but I found little problems obtaining a ticket , going down Friday lunchtime and obtaining a spare ticket from a Southampton supporter .
4 I used little corner blocks to create the corner effect , and each of these is tongue and grooved on for strength .
5 I used little shells to represent the people in the town , as usual .
6 At first , I thought it was spilt wine but then it spread and I noticed little splashes coming down from the ceiling above .
7 Though at this point I paid little notice to them as he did not emphasise them .
8 Bored stiff by him , I paid little attention : he retaliated by having me birched for idleness on three occasions , but these attempts to drive Latin into me from the wrong end proved equally unproductive .
9 I KILLED little Esmerelda because I felt I owed it to myself and to the world in general .
10 I spent little time at home now , so I was unable to be a detailed witness to the Great Love in the same account-keeping way as before .
11 I HEARD LITTLE PRINCESS CALL HIM DADDY
12 The weather was hot and I felt little interest in ruins ; but the Parthenon proved to have a matchless beauty for which I was quite unprepared .
13 ‘ So I wore little make-up , because I had to blend in .
14 I saw little evidence of it , certainly not from Kathy Kirby and Dusty Springfield .
15 From the corner of my eye I saw little Gino make his way over to the restaurant 's background music system .
16 From the far bank , I saw little waste-lands chock-full of old tin baths , rungless ladders , wheel-less bicycles , pecking chickens and , in one , an old sow .
17 In Magdalen 's communal life I took little part .
18 ‘ Immediately , though I took little notice of it when I was in Cheshire , I admit .
19 I did little bits to help , like picking up sticks for firewood and fetching water from the well , as we did n't have any electricity or running water .
20 I wondered what would have happened if I had told him that I was bisexual or that I liked little girls .
21 No matter that I had little knowledge of regional variety .
22 At the time I had little knowledge of dogs .
23 By the end of that season , when he won his first championship by a large margin , I had little doubt who had achieved the triumph : Niki is no braggart , but in the first of many longish talks , he explained to me that his nature was such that he really just could n't stand the second-rate ; and if you saw the second-rate around you , you had a clear choice — either you cleared out and found yourself the first-rate or you simply demanded that second-rate people became first-rate .
24 ‘ As a nurse , I could not understand why she did not directly approach the hospitals concerned , for at that time I had little doubt that she would have received informed , prompt , honest replies . ’
25 The person was a friend and I knew she was a healer — although , as you will have realised , I had little idea what a healer was or did .
26 I had little idea at that time of the pernicious nature of cancer .
27 He had happened upon me at the crucial moment : I had little idea of who I was or what I was entitled to from life , let alone what it behoved me to contribute .
28 But I found I had little idea how to set about producing a crime short story .
29 I commented to Miklós that I had little hope of the New World solving the problems of the Old when it could not face up to its own difficulties .
30 I had little hope of re-employment , and so it seemed to me that the only thing to do was to set up in business , ’ he explains .
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