Example sentences of "[pron] [pron] [vb past] [pers pn] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 It seemed to me I owed him some explanation .
2 Anyway to finish that story about stopping and starting , I stopped there for fifty years and me mother was still alive when er when I at ninety three and when I retired in nineteen seventy nine , nineteen eighty I told me mum that I was finishing and she looked at me I told you that job would n't last and I , I , I mean I 'd done fifty years all but a few months .
3 The last magazine article came out on me , I had a lot of Christians writing to tell me I had it all wrong .
4 Every one of them I told them all about peep hole
5 I I heard you wrong , what did you say ?
6 These ones here though , I was surprised I I got them right .
7 I I got it last night .
8 It 's rather interesting at the erm book keeping course last Wednesday I I did it all without using a calculator because the examples essentially were quite simple .
9 It then had to be washed and hung up to dry before my bucketful was " sold " to someone who got it ready for the shops .
10 and one lady was told by someone who kissed her first , first kiss , said to her , she was just a natural
11 Someone who told me roundabout that
12 At an effective level , the one at which I made it possible for Jean-Claude to work uninterruptedly , I felt both the benefits of a com-panionable relationship with someone of whom I was , in many ways , admiring , and a sense of my own worth : I was useful to him .
13 I suspect that the hon. Gentleman had framed his supplementary before hearing my answer to his question , in which I made it clear that the number of nurses who were employed during that period was far greater than the number who qualified .
14 I refer you to my letter of 8 March regarding the above tape , with which I sent you two copies of the Agreement that had been drawn up ( following your request of 7 March ) .
15 A sentence such as ( 8 ) below could refer to the past ( How could you have expected me to know the answers to those questions which you asked me last week ? ) , the present ( Why are you asking me ?
16 Back in those Hard Times , funerals offered us the comfort of knowing that , however tough it was for me and thee , there was always somebody who had it worse .
17 She was notorious for having lots of love affairs which she told us all about .
18 She listens to him more than anyone , and it was his will which prevailed when she composed last year 's Christmas speech , in which she made it clear that she would never abdicate .
19 Jazz was limping and making pained , mutterings and cursings which she thought it tactful to ignore .
20 When the Foreign Office List made its first appearance " it was strongly objected to in certain quarters , as likely to afford information to the general public with regard to the office , which they thought it advisable they should not possess , and much information was for a time withheld " .
21 He sought my advice on one or two matters where complaints were made against him of alleged libels , which I had no real difficulty in seeing off and about which he wrote me appreciative letters .
22 After other speeches condemning Ian Paisley , Terence O'Neill rose and delivered a long statement in which he made it clear that he regarded the defeat of Ian Paisley as a central part of his reforming Unionism .
23 On behalf of Council 80 of Stockport , I would like to thank everyone who made it such a successful evening .
24 ‘ Do n't tell me you tidied it all by yourself . ’
25 You never see me who wrote you that then ?
26 ’ Chert — did you tell anyone that it was me who got you involved with Ardakke ? ’
27 ‘ Dr Smithson , you must tell me who gave you this . ’
28 Mind you I saw her two day 's ago and she looked absolutely fit as a fiddle so I said I think it strikes quickly and
29 ‘ I did n't want to tell you I saw him that last night , for … well …
30 She she she mistimed it last night .
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