Example sentences of "[pron] [verb] i [adv] in " in BNC.

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1 I mean I normally in the past I 've always gone for experienced keepers because you know I mean they they do n't come to their prime until , I do n't think goalkeepers over twenty six twenty seven onwards .
2 stiletto heels , fucking whips and stuff , she says right get in , what , and he 's fucking on this thing and he 's going round and round and round he says I think I maybe in love , you know , he fucking come out and he 's looking really awful and meanwhile this James Ritter character he was suppose to , he 's stopped the robbery and sent the police and their all going wow what a guy , fucking great stuff , that is a funny film and er
3 If she caught me now in the front hall she would waste a good ten minutes warning me that I was risking tuberculosis and a gastric ulcer by being too late to eat a proper meal quietly , and probably throw in the chances of my poisoning a patient with the wrong drug before the night was out through carelessness induced by my own lack of blood-sugar .
4 And if you phoned me early in the year it must have been just after we got the V W.
5 I 'll judge marmosets if you catch me nicely in a weak moment on the end of a moribund week .
6 What I do know 's probably distorted , as you told me once in London .
7 ‘ All these chores are making me so hungry that it is , as I said before , only fair that you feed me properly in order to keep me going . ’
8 She looked me straight in the eye .
9 She supported me enthusiastically in bringing in new work practices in the interests of efficiency , and in introducing new services and extending others .
10 No one knew me now in South Shields .
11 They impress me less in the beautiful central Andante in C minor : it needs expressive playing which should be poignant without overstepping the bounds of musical propriety that Mozart set himself , and here it sounds merely pleasing .
12 I do n't think they like me much in that office but then , I 'm not keen on them either .
13 They know me now in the London Road and that 's great .
14 They took me there in the car .
15 He prodded me playfully in the chest .
16 He looks me straight in the eyes as he takes his hand from my glass .
17 He visited me here in Geneva in 1814 , with Lord and Lady Davy .
18 The secret of public speaking , he told me early in the campaign , is to address your audience right between the eyes .
19 He drove me there in his little green car ( ‘ What has happened to his bicycle ? ’
20 ‘ Psst — Jack , ’ I hissed as he joined me damply in the breeze-filled tent .
21 He served me well in the attack on the T'ang 's Plantations . ’
22 Will he join me also in condemning the inefficiency of Labour councils , whose failure to collect rents and fill empty properties is a major barrier to the provision of homes for the homeless ?
23 Will he join me today in thanking the Sheikh of Abu Dhabi for his recent proposals which form part of the crucial negotiations that are taking place ?
24 If the hon. Gentleman really cares about unemployed people , will he join me today in calling on his Front-Bench colleagues to abandon their policy of a national statutory minimum wage , to abandon their jobs tax and to abandon their embrace of the European Community social action programme so that we can avoid the disastrous consequences for employment that would follow from such policies ?
25 Why , once he looked me right in the face and sneered .
26 And then he looked me straight in the face , ‘ One day , soon , Nicky , God 's spirit is going to deal with you .
27 ‘ Yes , but will it get me home in time to see Coronation Street tonight ? ’
28 He shot me again in the right-hand side of my body . ’
29 I challenge anyone to show me anywhere in the New Testament a verse that says Christ pays a penalty .
30 ‘ That 's really what drew me here in the first place , ’ he said quietly .
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