Example sentences of "[pers pn] had [verb] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 Now I know that when I had made love to you that afternoon I was right to follow my instincts . ’
2 I had made proposals on National Insurance but that , said Nigel , was a Budget matter .
3 I had made notations by the Cicero Club stories .
4 ‘ You suspected that from the little you told me that morning at Coutances I had made investigations and found out something . ’
5 I had made loops to go over her wrists , I told her , so that she would n't lose her grip .
6 By Christmas 1942 I had settled down pretty well at B.P. I had made friends and was enjoying the camaraderie that was peculiar to wartime organisations .
7 There was only one occasion when , either preoccupied or through sheer inattentiveness , I found him rising before I had made preparations to follow .
8 I had made Lucy take off her anorak so she looked a bit less like an urban guerrilla , even though the T-shirt she was wearing underneath — ‘ Rats Have Rights ’ — was a bit of a giveaway , or maybe I was just paranoid .
9 I was glad I had made arrangements with a City Temple friend to go back to the flat in Southwark to collect the last of my wanted books etc .
10 Vancouver boasted the largest Chinese community in the country , and I had made scores of Chinese-Canadian friends .
11 It lasted three days in court and I had to do night duties and then , finishing between 12 and 2 a.m. , going on nights again , going off early , going to court .
12 John 's script was so true and real and fine , I felt I had to do honour to that , and to the kind of people that it was talking about .
13 And I had to do conversions on thousands of pounds and litres and gallons , I was working from a con
14 I had to do Valponi as well , which is one of these other ones .
15 ‘ I 'd got the hang of jumping up and down when I was told I had to do twists and turns as well .
16 I had joined Thames Valley back in the early eighties from London Irish .
17 I had to save Jamila from the man who loved Arthur Conan Doyle .
18 I had to save ninepence because I had these free passes .
19 The problems I had getting Dawn used to my family were made worse for two reasons .
20 I had to chew soap to froth and so on .
21 In my mind , I had pictured Charles , Anne and myself standing in the middle of an otherwise empty common room , sherry glass in hand , desperately trying to think of something to say to each other .
22 By the time I had reached Moscow I had exhausted myself physically in a purely sensual relationship with my Leningrad guide , Natasha .
23 Without needing to be told , I knew I had reached Frankenstein 's secret laboratory !
24 I had reached Adrar , so I was able to accept help from the lads .
25 I had visited Paris once or twice , but now I was fortunate enough to secure a grant from the LCC — £15 , but princely for those days — which permitted me to spend a week or two there for the purpose of study , my subject being modern French philosophy .
26 It had been some time since I had visited Ingleborough , so last summer I went back with a couple of friends to rediscover some of its hidden treasures .
27 For me , this was a second shufti , for I had visited Jordan almost forty years before .
28 It came as a shock as I had visited Jack two weeks earlier , having travelled down to Shergold Guitars in Romford to collect my Burns Marvin after Jack had refurbished it for me .
29 I could n't bring myself to believe it , and after I had visited Cooper in Maidstone Prison and McMahon in Long Lartin Prison and spoken to their two solicitors , Gareth Peirce for Cooper and Wendy Mantle for McMahon , as well as to Tom Sargant , the secretary of JUSTICE , who had also taken up the case , I was convinced that they were as innocent of the Luton murder as I was .
30 All my adult life I had adored foods which were high in fat .
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