Example sentences of "[adv] i [verb] [pers pn] the " in BNC.

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1 And so I told her the whole story of my lonely childhood with the Reed family , and of my terrible experience in the red room .
2 And I said I said so I told her the registration and she gave me the room number but she said .
3 ‘ I hit the fish and stright away though it was a good one , but my son Tony has never caught a pike so I handed him the rod , ’ said Lee .
4 So I give her the colour of the , what what sort of colours ?
5 So I give you the choice of a , a Lamborghini or a Rover what would you rather have ?
6 So I give you the address the , the tel telephone number , you can ring her up
7 So I allowed him the honour of endorsing my change of name .
8 Tonight I find you the special number one steak , and the best wine . ’
9 The conversation was wide-ranging , but gradually I told her the full story of what had happened to me over the previous year or so .
10 Yesterday I fed him the bony scraps from my reindeer stew and he is now mine for ever .
11 ‘ Let it work its way through him , ’ said Ellen to Brenda , ‘ let it work its way through and out ; the harder I put it the faster it will happen . ’
12 Well I tell you the reason why I do n't
13 Well I tell you the best one is
14 well I sent you the report did n't I ?
15 Well I sent you the the initial report just to show you what
16 Mid-level Immediately I told him the truth about it , ( he relented . )
17 Right then I take it the minutes of the last Annual General Meeting haven been circulated already ?
18 And then I saw her the next day and and then I realized the and then I came back home and I told her why does n't she see there 's something changed .
19 ‘ Huh , ’ she said , and then smiled faintly as she said , ‘ odd , you know : you tell me that Annie 's a good woman , and I suppose she is , but I ca n't stand the sight of her ; then I tell you the constable 's a good man , and you know he is , and you ca n't stand the sight of him .
20 Then I gave him the slip and came to London . ’
21 Then I owe you the most sincere apologies , Sir James , ’ he commented .
22 Well , I 'm terribly sorry if I did n't add another notch to your bedpost , but look on the bright side — at least I saved you the bother of having to come up with a nice little farewell speech at the end of it all .
23 But as , as I say it was a job at that time and and in fact I 'd never , this was the only factory I had n't fancied , working in was the B M K , and yet I like it the best .
24 One about Flaubert , one about Ellen , one about myself My own is the simplest of the three — it hardly amounts to more than a convincing proof of my existence — and yet I find it the hardest to begin .
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