Example sentences of "[noun sg] [verb] me [vb infin] [adj] " in BNC.

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1 This partially revived me after the £1,314 price tag made me feel faint .
2 His look made me feel guilty , though I could n't think why it should .
3 ‘ Flaming June ’ , people muttered bitterly amid the cascades of rain , and the thought of the poor men who must be waiting to set out across the choppy Channel in their small boats to fight a bloody battle on the other side made me feel cold and sick .
4 I think attending an evening class in life drawing helped me overcome this hurdle .
5 I think attending an evening class in life drawing helped me overcome this hurdle .
6 Okay Suzanne , now you had to slacken off the halyard to let me tie that last knot so if you could tighten it up again that will pull the sail up to the top of the mast .
7 Surely if I know all this I should be able to put on just enough weight to make me feel comfortable , or at least stop losing any more ?
8 The police had found somebody who had seen me on my island at the time of the murder , and so the judge let me go free .
9 Was this a deliberate campaign to make me feel small ?
10 All this chaff makes me feel uneasy and isolated — or rather , did make me .
11 For the moment let me repeat that what all this seems to point to as natural is the self-imposed exile which will allow the artist figure , whether Stephen or Joyce himself , to create a new world , with the language of the writer as his ticket , his lifeline , his rescue .
12 And I 'm not too concerned with the day-to-day management of individual professionals , I 've got a team to help me do that .
13 That knowledge made me feel good .
14 The mask made me look terrifying and rather professional , like a commando .
15 For years his name made me feel sick too :
16 Doing all that TV stuff made me realise that , no , what I 'm interested in is pure movement .
17 You go to daddy for a minute let me get this erm these spuds on .
18 Both were smoking and the pungent smell of Gauloise tobacco so early in the morning made me feel sick .
19 After mortal trouble Let me lie still Where the wind drives and the clouds stream Over the hill Where grass 's thousand thirsty mouths Sup up their fill Of the slow dew and the sharp rain Of the mantling snow dissolv 'd again At Heaven 's sweet will .
20 I got quite a lot of reading done — John managed to persuade one of the nice Italian staff at the British Council Library to let me have two more books than my five allowed , so I had them on her ticket !
21 I got to my feet and helped them , and Nell with teasing amusement watched me fold pink napkins into water lilies and said , ‘ Well , well , hidden depths , ’ and I answered , ‘ You should see my dishwashing , ’ which were the sort of infantile surface remarks of something we both guessed might suddenly become serious .
22 If it had n't been for the colonel letting me have this cottage for a peppercorn rent , God knows where I 'd be . ’
23 A simple adaption using a machine bolt lets me mark many chamfers , on different dimensions .
24 Even indoors , where vigorous exercise was impossible , I would insist on open windows , explaining that lack of fresh air made me feel sleepy .
25 The thought made me feel warm inside .
26 Their genuine spirit made me feel bogus and cowardly .
27 On a good day , it only takes a glimpse of blue sky or a tree in blossom to make me feel full of the joys of spring and in love with life .
28 Looking at the road makes me notice that old white van .
29 This secrecy made me feel cold and lonely .
30 The insanity of my reality made me feel stupid and powerless .
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