Example sentences of "[vb infin] [pers pn] would [verb] me " in BNC.

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1 Later , when I was more familiar with the beliefs and practices of the movement and had ‘ learned the language ’ , I would interact with the Moonies as though I were one of them , and , although I never pretended that I accepted their beliefs or that I was anything other than a sociologist studying the movement , members who did not know me would mistake me for a member — the Moonies themselves were no longer ‘ translating ’ for me when we were interacting .
2 ‘ You did promise you would get me the promotion that 's coming up .
3 I do n't think she 'd forgive me .
4 ‘ If I told my therapist that , ’ said Scarlet , ‘ do you think she 'd let me go ? ’
5 ‘ But I did n't think you would ditch me .
6 ‘ I somehow do n't think you 'd manipulate me into discussing religion with a real-live rabbi .
7 ‘ But like I said , I did n't think you 'd want me along . ’
8 I do n't think you 'd like me doing that Alex ?
9 When I tell you the reason I 'm going you 'll wish you 'd let me go .
10 Do you think they would allow me to pass on this ultimate truth ? ’
11 ‘ But I do n't think they would let me run it on the company 's machine , ’ he added regretfully .
12 But she could not resist asking , walking straight into his waiting jaws , ‘ So , since you know so much , what do you think they 'd tell me ? ’
13 I 'm too much help to the police I do n't think they 've , I do n't think they 'd move me on .
14 ‘ I do n't think they 'd miss me , ’ Ruth confessed .
15 On the plus side , I did n't think they 'd jump me at Stuart Street as long as Doogie was there .
16 In ordinary spoken discourse the endless cycle of encoding-decoding-encoding may be terminated by an action , as when for instance I say , ‘ The door is open ’ and you say , ‘ Do you mean you would like me to shut it ? ’ and I say , ‘ If you do n't mind ’ , and you shut the door , we may be satisfied that at a certain level my meaning has been understood .
17 ‘ I do n't suppose you 'd let me see Angy 's flat ? ’ she asked .
18 All the same I do n't suppose you 'd keep me on my salary unless I was working most of the time , would you ?
19 ‘ Do you think he would help me ? ’
20 ‘ Do you think he 'd tell me ?
21 And do you think he 'd let me have the children ?
22 I was surprised , certainly , but I did n't think it would affect me too much . ’
23 I came here today to have a look but I did n't think it would affect me the way it has .
24 But I do n't think it would do me any harm to develop some more organizational skills because mos most jobs require them .
25 Many systems and many faces may have changed over the last year or two and I do n't imagine you would believe me if I said that none of these changes had saddened me but , in a changing market-place , the basics have n't changed and the most basic precept of all is that there are no healthy banks where there are no health customers to sustain them .
26 Why did they say you would tell me about Van Gogh ? "
27 ‘ You did say you would let me know .
28 I did , yes , erm , when erm , we thought our prisoner was finished the co-ordinators wrote to me and said would I be interested , would our group be interested in erm , writing to Yugoslavia 's still , because with the Civil War going on there 's lots of cases coming up , for example there was a whole hospital full of patients that were taken prisoner I do n't know if they were actually physically removed or whether they were held in the hospital without access to medical treatment for something like ten days , and erm , Saria did say she 'd help me last time and I wrote back and said yes , two of us could write once a month , well they 're taken that very liberally and , and , got two or three things from the already and erm , if anyone else is interested in writing an odd letter say once a month to Yugoslavia maybe they could erm , let me know later on . .
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