Example sentences of "[pron] 'd been [v-ing] in " in BNC.

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1 Since I 'd been living in the flat , Shadwell had been coming to see Eva at least once a week , during the day , when Dad was at the office .
2 I 'd been living in the country with my wife when she died unexpectedly .
3 I 'd been teaching in Preston it must have been three years then , and when I read that book I suddenly realized I knew nothing about Lancashire at all — not the real Lancashire .
4 I 'd been indulging in good heart exercise while sitting still .
5 I 'd been shopping in Smiths and I thought I recognised him .
6 I 'd been working in a factory , but I had to give that up because I could n't afford a nursery .
7 Nobody 'd been fighting in there , take it from me . ’
8 She 'd been waitressing in the dining-room for breakfast and lunch .
9 She 'd been living in England such a long time , of course , it was a bit too free and easy over there .
10 Even when she 'd been helping in the kitchen she 'd found her eyes straying , as if magnetised , in his direction .
11 She 'd been browsing in a bookshop after buying a bedtime book for Kirsty when she 'd suddenly caught sight of the clock on the wall and seen , to her horror , that it was nearly five o'clock .
12 Well okay , that was a time she 'd been camping in the Lake District , Mrs did .
13 She was in fact very thin but had this huge wire frame around her ’ It turned out that she 'd been coming in a couple of times a week , stealing hundreds of pounds worth of clothes , hanging them on her frame then walking out .
14 Her face and neck felt as if she 'd been sitting in the heat of an oven .
15 A lady phoned in saying she 'd been sitting in a café when some animal rights campaigners carrying collection tins arrived and ordered a meal .
16 This time last night she 'd been lying in Dane 's arms , feeling safe , secure , at peace with the world for perhaps the first time in her troubled life .
17 On trial at Worcester Crown Court were thirty year old Jamie Ray , a Californian who 'd been staying in England , James Lovelidge from London who 's twenty seven and unemployed , and Michael Rock , a forty one year old French Canadian who was living in London .
18 I 'd just turned on to York Way when I spotted the two city gents who 'd been drinking in the pub .
19 Dot knew from their voices that those two young men who 'd been working in the fields must be prisoners .
20 We 'd been living in his London flat , and so far our frantic house-hunt had been futile — too big , too small , too near the road , too far from London , but mostly too expensive .
21 so we started to look for something and I wanted a bungalow , I did n't want to house again , just the two bedrooms I thought would be nice , so what we did we found this bu er this bungalow in er out of Crewe in Haslington and er we put up our house for sale , it cost seventeen thousand , five hundred and this bungalow we bought seventeen thousand , six hundred and fifty , so all I had to add was one hundred and sixty pounds , to sell the house , but the house needed change all the windows to put all the windows and the doors because they were all rotting in , you know , because the houses built er before the second world war and er what we did we put up the and in three months ' time , it in three months ' time my house went and we were moved , in September we started to sell , in January we 'd been living in the , in the new bungalow and then about three years later they built a row of bungalows on the other side where there should , should of been , they kept the land , it should of been shops , but then they changed their minds , they did , they did n't build the shops , but they built all these bungalows again on the other side , you 've been to my home , yeah , so the road that , over the road these bungalows were about three years later than ours and they were going down for thirty two thousand pound , and I bought mine for seventeen thousand seven sixty at six fifty , yeah
22 He had n't said he was going away and renting his house , which was odd because they 'd been chatting in the village not two days before he 'd disappeared and Leo taken up residence .
23 Maybe they 'd been meeting in secret for a while .
24 After all , he 'd been ferreting in the records for a good while . ’
25 One Saturday night he 'd been drinking in front of the telly when he decided to phone Sheila 's place .
26 He 'd been funny , telling stories against himself of fiascos he had survived in the theatre , and he 'd been flattering in a subtle way .
27 He 'd been living in a £500-a-week hotel suite in Nottingham , spending £2,000 a month on clothes .
28 She heard him release the breath he 'd been holding in a sigh .
29 His name was , but I found he 'd been lodging in a house in Road close to the railway station .
30 He 'd been hiding in a woodland graveyard , only half-heartedly concealed behind one of the leaning roofed crosses .
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