Example sentences of "[vb past] n't say so " in BNC.

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1 He did n't say so , mind , but I told Angie she would have to watch it after she married him .
2 In a way , Charles agreed with him , although he did n't say so .
3 But did n't say so .
4 At least , if she was unhappy , or fretted for her family , she did n't say so .
5 Though he did n't say so , he was looking for something more satisfactory for himself and Sien , and perhaps for an extended family if her mother and brother joined them later .
6 At the beginning of the O-level summer term I weighed eight stone three pounds and , if I was pleased at having lost two pounds , I certainly did n't say so .
7 The man must obviously have been armed to have kidnapped two adults single-handed but she did n't say so .
8 She did n't say so . ’
9 ‘ You did n't say so . ’
10 Although he did n't say so , Lyn knew he was looking for the marks of Peach 's claws .
11 I did n't say so , because the idea was too unpleasant to be clothed in words and made visible .
12 He did n't say so , but it was evident that he had been successful in the sheepdog trials , because he was unusually cheerful and forthcoming and he seemed quite jubilant to meet them there .
13 ‘ I think they 're getting ready for the Second Front , ’ Sarah told Maureen , ‘ although Joe did n't say so . ’
14 Josie said that she did n't usually get in until around six , but that there were a few extra jobs that she wanted to finish off ; Lucy had the feeling , but did n't say so , that the main point of the exercise was probably to get her out of the way before the slender red-haired woman arrived home .
15 ‘ I did n't say so exactly , ’ replied Mortimer .
16 She was not quite so sure , for some reason , but she did n't say so .
17 That was exactly how I felt , but I did n't say so .
18 The police were very kind , sympathetic , and , even if they did n't say so , it was quite clear what they thought .
19 ‘ But you did n't say so . ’
20 ‘ He did n't say so . ’
21 The purpose of of these four orders , which I must say I greatly welcome , it is one of the , the most beneficial things to come out of the B C C I er disaster er and er i if I can say in in effectively in answer to everything the honourable gentleman for Great Grimsby said and he and I have debated on many occasions , if fact usually on the television not on the floor of the house , but er an an an an because of it for not quite so long either , er but erm th the point I would make to his is that really what he was saying was th that what went wrong with B C C I is that Price Waterhouse knew there was fraud and did n't say so and that wha what Lord Justice Bingham pointed out was that there is a clear conflict of interest between the interest of the client who they work for and the public interest and that what needed , what was needed was some amendment to the banking act to clarify that and that is precisely what er this order actually does and you ca n't really er Madam Deputy Speaker , expect anyone to really seriously criticise the government when in actual fact not only have they come up with the regulation to deal with that but they 've also gone further and said we will apply this to financial services and to building societies and to insurance companies as well , just to be absolutely sure .
22 She did n't say and I , I never thought to ask her , no she did n't say so we 're just , that 's why really as I say I do n't , I think at first she was quite happy for us to go in and maybe take stuff in , but I do n't think she was happy about us doing structural things on it
23 He was speaking as if Gentle would agree to the rendezvous , which , though he had n't said so yet , he would .
24 At home , before the accident , he had n't said so much to her for years .
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