Example sentences of "[noun sg] so [conj] i could " in BNC.

  Next page
No Sentence
1 I 'd go to the SS Great Britain and sit by the breezy river , and I 'd compose my stupid self and compose my story so that I could tell lies confidently instead of giving myself away .
2 So that basically is it how would we see the course 's structure I do n't think we 've got time to do that today I wanted really to just to throw some ideas with you good folks and get the benefit of your thoughts and experience so that I could go back to Napier and say this is what my committee says
3 I catapulted the tiny beasts across the creek and into the mud on the far side so that I could have funerals .
4 At one time my major ambition was to have my father buy me an excavator so that I could make really big dams .
5 Later I put one on the wall of my study so that I could watch these changes in my appearance .
6 I suggested that it might be a good idea to get it in midsummer so that I could get plenty of practice in before the skiddy weather set in , but he thought there might be too much tourist traffic going through the town and on the roads around it in the middle of the summer .
7 Determined to shoot one with a really fine head , I decided to spend a night near the mountain-top so that I could hunt for them in the early morning before they lay up for the day .
8 A year later , I received a letter inviting me to lunch so that I could come and see his garden .
9 Enough work so that I could enjoy it but not so much work that I would be fed up .
10 I pulled a corner of the curtain away from the window so that I could see out .
11 It was great to be working in one place for a few nights on the trot so that I could afford to go to that amount of trouble . ’
12 How could I phrase the question so that I could distinguish between free choice and manipulative coercion ?
13 I reached the desolate head of the valley ( few flowers here ) and decided to attempt a crossing to the other side of the beck so that I could return by the path descending from Black Sail Pass .
14 One such person was John Curran , a producer at ITN , who had already demonstrated his kindness by giving me an answering machine so that I could screen any calls from the press .
15 I put the receiver down for a moment so that I could take two hands to the strawboard .
16 At gym lessons I needed to organise my changing routine so that I could take off my outdoor shoes , slip my feet immediately into my gym shoes and , even before I tied my gym-shoe laces , put my outdoor shoes into my satchel hoping that they would stay there throughout the lesson .
17 The fields shone a new green in the sun , and the air which for days had been hazy had been cleaned by the rain so that I could make out the shapes of sheep grazing near the old Coal Road above Cowgill as I walked down the lane .
18 Well I did we we talked about this , you see Mary Anne , half way through the conversation er Neil went out of the room so that I could to Mary Ann and I said towards the end of my conversation , you know , Mary Ann you 're a very wise person , give me some advice I said , I told her about Neil not wanting no not doing well on the driving , although he can drive she said he does n't want to do it she said do n't hassle him so when he came downstairs I said I 've been talking to Mary Ann and she sends you her love and because , of course , you know , we 've got a grandson , you know she had a son , my
19 On that first occasion my father took me through Craven Hill Gardens into Porchester Terrace , showed me the blank brick back of the facades and lifted me up on to the wall so that I could look down into the shaft .
20 Adam gave it to me the other day so that I could lock up .
21 Terry and I were worst hit and for a couple of days I was left off the chain so that I could use the toilet whenever I needed .
22 I wolfed the lot and crawled upstairs to bed , requesting an early call so that I could catch the 8.30 bus from Lochinver , still nearly three miles further on , to Lairg .
23 ‘ I was so astonished that I 've been waiting until people started to come to church so that I could show somebody and you 're the first and most suitable .
24 There must be something in this : when morning came , amid some laughter , my husband re-enacted the closing chapter of the old year by going up into the rafters and suspending himself through the hole so that I could take photographs .
25 Then she flew on to a high window-sill and I had to ask the headmaster to bring me a ladder so that I could bring her down .
26 He installed me in the base-camp , an old redbrick gardener 's cottage with roses climbing up the side , offered me the keys to the crew bus so that I could pick up something to eat in nearby Worksop , and even had the foresight to take a pint of milk from the warden 's fridge so that I 'd be able to make a cup of coffee in the morning .
27 I dropped my handkerchief so that I could get a closer look .
28 I rang his agent and said : ‘ Do you think I could have his number so that I could persuade him ? ’
29 When the telegram arrived , Joan and I went for a walk so that I could work the adrenalin out of my system .
30 I also needed to be knowledgeable about the procedures , likely outcomes and prognosis so that I could give full and accurate explanations to Mrs Allen .
  Next page