Example sentences of "[pron] have [verb] [noun] [conj] " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 What she wants to talk about , everyone has to do matrix or learn more of the crap .
2 see I 've got Jessica and Kate talking in the kitchen
3 Socialists believe in greater equality in society : ‘ A more equal society will be a more prosperous society and a more peaceful society ’ ( Roy Hattersley , Hansard 16 April , 1987 ) , but they are criticised for favouring policies of distribution rather than production — ‘ Someone has to create wealth before the politicians fall to sharing that wealth out ’ ( Kenneth Clarke , Hansard 6 April 1987 ) .
4 What I , one of the things that I , I think you must have somewhere , and that is that at some stage you order something , you get it in and somehow someone has to tell accounts that yes , they can pay that invoice .
5 Once I 'd eaten dinner that was it .
6 I thought oh , I thought it was like one of your tapes and I 'd pressed record and it had started recording over it .
7 and that 's what makes me evil , that 's why I say I 'd moved heaven and earth for someone who 's nice
8 I 'd heard Dad and Eva in the bar analysing the performance as if it were Miles Davis 's farewell appearance .
9 I 'd heard Robert and the Russian doctor he went to the Pole with in '89 discussing a short trek of the last 100 miles .
10 I went in her bedroom last night , switched the light on , went I thought I 'd seen lightning and I thought oh I could n't have seen lightning , anyway I goes to .
11 I 'd seen Chola and Mina setting out for the forest in the early morning , and three times during the day I 'd watched them coming back , stooped over and staggering under the weight of the enormous loads that spread across their backs , stretching three times broader than their shoulders and several feet above their heads .
12 Of course I 'd seen pictures and I 've always wanted a guitar like that .
13 but I , I 'd never get them done , and I mean I 'd fed Matthew and I shouted down and I said look you 'll have to come and get him dressed cos I 've got dinners to put up yet
14 I 'd met Kristin and Sabine that morning and they 'd told me to come over and described where they were now living .
15 Perhaps I could tell Norman he was a godson with whom I 'd lost touch when his real mother died ?
16 I 'd coveted Lotta because she was coveted by other men and I had to be the winner .
17 I 'd given Luke and Ma a few problems .
18 I 'd watched Motown and the blues catch on in the Sixties and the roots of all that stuff was laid in the Forties , so the funk was always going to catch on and stay .
19 I 'd got sandwiches and some gin .
20 While he was getting ready , I wandered back to the turning where I 'd left Armstrong and looked back across the road .
21 It took me a week to get myself together again , and by the time you got back from leave I 'd left Johannesburg because there were n't any jobs for me there .
22 I 'd chosen Jenkins because he 'd recently got the sack and no-one was likely to run into him .
23 When I 'd had confirmation that permission would be granted for one dwelling , no size specified , I toured round the estate agents , seeking a prospective purchaser . ’
24 I said , " Yes " , and I plugged it that I 'd done it while I 'd had Louisa and that 's what I think went in my favour in a way .
25 I 'd ordered champagne and flowers because a honeymoon is once in a lifetime but we ended up carrying our own luggage in pitch darkness across a car park and up a huge flight of stairs .
26 I hurried round the corner to where I 'd parked Armstrong and climbed aboard .
27 Er I 'd known Lawrence since , it was either , nineteen eighty five or nineteen eighty six .
28 Teacher If I 'd known Student If I 'd known Teacher the price Student the price Teacher If I 'd known the price Student If I 'd known the prices , etc
29 ‘ You suspected that from the little you told me that morning at Coutances I had made investigations and found out something . ’
30 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 .
  Next page