Example sentences of "[pers pn] see [pron] [prep] that " in BNC.
Next pageNo | Sentence |
---|---|
1 | I seen it before that one . |
2 | ‘ No , of course not , but ca n't — wo n't I see you before that ? ’ |
3 | I saw him with that Jones girl , ’ answered his sister Dorothy . |
4 | I saw something in that hall tonight which I have kept secret . |
5 | ‘ And I shall need a bigger wardrobe ; I think I saw one in that other bedroom . ’ |
6 | And I saw it before that , about , yeah about eight as well . |
7 | But I want to hear now the whole story of your life , and how you came to be with the boys I saw you with that day . ’ |
8 | On this latest apparent atrocity — I see it as that ; I have seen the film as much as anybody has — I have to be absolutely certain of the facts before I take action . |
9 | Have you , have you seen him since that time when you said to him about coming . |
10 | Er , , did you see him about that ? |
11 | And did you see anything through that ? |
12 | Well , ca n't you see it on that ? |
13 | Did you see you with that gas that advert she did with that poor woman ! |
14 | Well when you saw it without that after you 've sawn it you 've got ta |
15 | You see they did n't do things then that they would have done today , you see , seven years and you see I at that time , well I used to used to have a day off and instead of having a half day a week we used to have full day a fortnight and so of course on my day off I came home to see what I can do to help , you see and er my mother died . |
16 | you see none of that 's written down because nobody |
17 | But we never really believed that John Major was a sports fan until we saw him on that bleak Sunday afternoon at Stamford Bridge . |
18 | Yeah , cos we saw one in that |
19 | In verse writing , as in virtually any other human activity we may think of , there are thresholds to be reached and crossed : below a certain threshold of practice and expertise , the attitude of the amateur produces only work that is ‘ amateurish ’ ( and heaven knows , we see plenty of that all around us ) ; above a certain threshold of facility , the attitude of the professional produces work that is glib , facile , heartless , and academic — and we see plenty of that , too . |
20 | In verse writing , as in virtually any other human activity we may think of , there are thresholds to be reached and crossed : below a certain threshold of practice and expertise , the attitude of the amateur produces only work that is ‘ amateurish ’ ( and heaven knows , we see plenty of that all around us ) ; above a certain threshold of facility , the attitude of the professional produces work that is glib , facile , heartless , and academic — and we see plenty of that , too . |
21 | I do n't want to see Sarah in that way , and I would n't want her to see me in that kind of light either . ’ |
22 | She felt sorry for him again , and worried because it must hurt him to see her like that . |
23 | do they see it as that ? |
24 | Carrie said , ‘ She must be stark mad to come in and let him see her like that . |
25 | ‘ Yes , but will he see it like that ? ’ |
26 | ‘ You remember how angry Alain became when he saw me with that book ? ’ she said . |
27 | ‘ He telephoned to tell me about it … he was very angry when he saw you with that book and I could tell that he had said things he should not have said . ’ |
28 | According to such a theory , if we , in English , call both our mother 's brother and our father 's brother by the same term — ‘ uncle ’ — it is because these two relatives are , to us , the same ‘ kind ’ of relative , and that probably the fact that we use the one word causes us to see them in that way . |